The Language of Business Intelligence - G

 

Most comprehensive business intelligence glossary by Vernon Prior. Market & competitive intelligence thesaurus and glossary. Terms and terminology used in business intelligence.



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Gateway may be either a Library gateway or a Portal.

Gisting is the art of concisely reducing complex material to its absolute essence for intelligence reporting purposes.  See also: Intelligence briefing, Report, Summary, Synopsis.

Globalization refers to the growth of interconnectivity that has been taking place since man moved out of Africa about 1.6 million years ago.  Such increased interconnectivity has resulted in greater economic, political, and religious flows across cultures and countries.  More particularly, globalization refers to the continuing economic, technological, social, and political integration of the world that followed World War II.  Major benefits have been its effect on world trade (which more than doubled as a proportion of nominal world gross domestic product between 1960 and 2000) and significant reductions in the costs of shipping and communication generally.    See also: International trade.



Glossary is a form of Dictionary which usually lists jargon or technical terms confined to a specific subject field, discipline, or profession. See also: Standards.

Graphic visualization, see Visualization.

Grey literature refers to material that is not formally published, such as institutional or technical reports, working papers, business documents, conference proceedings, or other documents not normally subject to editorial control or peer review.  It may be widely available yet difficult to trace.  Trade literature comes under this broad heading.  See also: Document.

Grid computing refers to the automated sharing and coordination of the collective processing power of many widely scattered, robust computers that are not normally centrally controlled, and that are subject to open standards. Other terms employed in this context include: Autonomic computing, Data-centre virtualization, On-demand computing, Public resource computing, and Utility computing. See also: Clustering.

Group technology is a coding and classification technique that groups parts according to geometric or manufacturing characteristics; used to facilitate Computer-assisted process planning. See also: Classify.

Groupware refers to a broad selection of software that is designed to enable collaboration, networking, and information-sharing activities through computer networks. Sometimes referred to as Collaboration software. Groupware may be designed to execute some or any combination of the following:

Electronic mail ;

• meetings management;

• project management;

Team scheduling;

Distance learning ;

• discussion groups.

See also: Community of practice, Networking, Networks.

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