Tuesday, December 8, 2015

7 features of E-commerce

Image result for picture o features of e commerce

  • Ubiquity - internet/ web technology is the marketplace is extended beyond traditional available everywhere; at work , at home and boundaries and is removed from a temporal and elsewhere via mobile devices, anytime .geographic location - market space is created ; shopping can take place anywhere . customer convenience is enhanced, and shopping costs are reduced.
  •  For example, clothes and shoes are usually directed to encourage customers to go somewhere to buy. E-commerce is ubiquitous meaning that it can be everywhere. E-commerce is the worlds reduce cognitive energy required to complete the task. *2. Global Reach* E-commerce allows business transactions on the cross country bound can be more convenient and more effective as compared with the traditional commerce. On the e-commerce businesses potential market scale is . more »
  • Global reach - the technology reaches commerce is enabled across cultural and across national boundaries, around the earth . national boundaries seamlessly and without modification. - market space includes potentially billions of consumers and millions of business worldwide .for example - Cosmetic company: implementation of a secure regulatory platform allowing researchers across various research centers to manage efficiently new product market launch across Europe and US
  • Universal standards - there is one set of there is one set of technical media standards technology standards namely internet across the globe 
  • Universal intellectual standards are standards which must be applied to thinking ... Forexample, the question, "What can be done about the education system in  ...
  • Richness - video , audio and text messages video, audio , and text marketing messages are are possible. integrated into a single marketing message and consuming experience. 
  • Though there is a channel richness hierarchy, it is important to understand that each ...For example, face to face communication is rich in context but may be very  .
  • Interactivity - the technology works consumers are engaged in a dialog that through interaction with the user . dynamically adjusts the experience to the individual, and makes the consumer a co- participant in the process of delivering goods to the goods 
  •  example is the Internet. Interactive multimedia “ allows two-way interaction with multimedia  ...e market . 
  • Information Density - the technology information processing, storage. and reduces information costs and raise quality . communication costs drop dramatically, while currency , accuracy , and timeliness improve greatly . information becomes plentiful, cheap ,and accurate 
  •  Information density of the field, which indicates the percentage of rows that ... Can you give an example for the information density as well?
  • Personalization Customiation - the personalization of marketing messges and technology allows personalized messages to custromization of products and services are be delivered to individuals as well as groups based on individuals characteristics. 
  • The difference between Personalization and Customization. Also explored are user experience issues with personalization. Case study of ...

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

e-commerce and internet

*MEANONG OF INTERNET t* The Internet, sometimes called simply "the Net," is a worldwide system of computer networks - a network of networks in which users at any one computer can, if they have permission, get information from any other computer (and sometimes talk directly to users at other computers). It was conceived by the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA) of the U.S. government in 1969 and was first known as the ARPANet. The original aim was to create a network that would allow users of a research computer at one university to "talk to" research computers at other universi... more »
  • HISTORY OF INTERNET * The Internet was the result of some visionary thinking by people in the early 1960s who saw great potential value in allowing computers to share information on research and development in scientific and military fields. J.C.R. Licklider of MIT first proposed a global network of computers in 1962, and moved over to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in late 1962 to head the work to develop it. Leonard Kleinrock of MIT and later UCLA developed the theory of packet switching, which was to form the basis of Internet connections. Lawrence Roberts ... more
  • THE ARPANET was the first wide area *packet switching* network, the "Eve" network of what has evolved into the *Internet* we know and love today. The ARPANET was originally created by the *IPTO* under the sponsorship of *DARPA*, and conceived and planned by *Lick Licklider*, *Lawrence Roberts*, and others as described earlier in this section. The ARPANET went into labor on August 30, 1969, when BBNdelivered the first *Interface Message Processor* (IMP) to *Leonard Kleinrock*'s Network Measurements Center at UCLA. The IMP was built from a Honeywell DDP 516 computer with 12... more »
  • NSFNET was a network for research computing deployed in the mid-1980s that in time also became the first backbone infrastructure for the commercial public Internet. Created as a result of a 1985 National Science Foundation (NSF) initiative, NSFNET established a high-speed connection among the five NSF supercomputer centers and the National Center for Atmospheric Research, and provided external access for scientists, researchers, and engineers who were not located near the computing centers. Broad access was necessary for a widely dispersed and frequently changing community of users. ... more »


  • NETWORKED-NETWORK From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia *Networked learning* is a process of developing and maintaining connections with people and information, and communicating in such a way so as to support one another's learning. The central term in this definition is connections. It takes a relational stance in which learning takes place both in relation to others and in relation to learning resources. It has been suggested that networked learning offers educational institutions more functional efficiency, in that the curriculum can be more tightly managed centrally, or in the case of vocational... more »




  • INTERNET-NETWORKING  is a term used by Cisco, BBN, and other providers of network products and services as a comprehensive term for all the concepts, technologies, and generic devices that allow people and their computers to communicate across different kinds of networks. For example, someone at a computer on a token ring local area network may want to communicate with someone at a computer on an Ethernet local area network in another country using a wide area network interconnection. The common inter-network protocols, routing tables, and related network devices required to achieve this ... more 


 


  • WEB -  Every path in the forest is barricaded with the strong yellow web of a species, belonging to the same division with the Epeira clavipes of Fabricius, which was formerly said by Sloane to make, in the West Indies, webs so strong as to catch birds.



    Image result for BROWSER
  • BROWSER - s an application program that provides a way to look at and interact with all the information on the World Wide Web. The word "browser" seems to have originated prior to the Web as a generic term for user interfaces that let you browse (navigate through and read)text files online. Technically, a Web browser is a client program that uses HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) to make requests of Web servers throughout theInternet on behalf of the browser user. Most browsers support e-mail and the File Transfer Protocol (FTP) but a Web browser is not required for those Internet ... more »