Today's enterprises are increasingly going global by becoming more distributed, leveraging resource bases in all parts of the world. Whether through offshore relationships, global support or application development programs, or linking disparate parts of organizations, enterprises are reducing costs by managing applications centrally, boosting security, and assuring network uptime.
This book provides comprehensive coverage and definitions of the most important issues, concepts, trends and technologies in the field of global information technology management, covering topics such as the technical platform for global IS applications, information systems projects spanning cultures, managing information technology in multidomestic/international/global/transnational corporations, and global information technology systems and socioeconomic development in developing countries
Economic Development: Government's Cutting Edge in IT
págs. 1-37
The Development of National ICT Policy in Kenya: The Influence of Regional Institutions and Key Stakeholders
págs. 38-56
págs. 57-80
The Possibility of Water-Cooler Chat?: Developing Communities of Practice for Knowledge Sharing within Global Virtual Teams
págs. 81-98
Understanding Brand Web Site Positioning in the New EU Member States: The Case of the Czech Republic
págs. 99-117
págs. 118-135
págs. 136-155
Business & IT Alignment in a Multinational Company: Issues and Approaches
págs. 156-166
págs. 167-194
págs. 195-214
págs. 215-242
Group Decision Making in Computer-Mediated Communication as Networked Communication: Understanding the Technology and Implications
págs. 243-256
Understanding Global Information Technology and Outsourcing Dynamics: A Multi-Lens Model
págs. 257-280
págs. 281-311
págs. 312-327
Offshoring in the ICT Sector in Europe: Trends and Scenario Analysis
págs. 328-355
págs. 356-380
págs. 381-404
págs. 405-431
Teaching Information Systems to International Students in Australia: A Global Information Technology Perspective
págs. 432-451
págs. 452-475
Natural Language Processing Agents and Document Clustering in Knowledge Management: The Semantic Web Case
págs. 476-498
págs. 499-518
págs. 519-534
págs. 535-552
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