Browse

Disciplinary Content

Posted on: #iteachmsu
Thursday, Jul 31, 2025
Core Functions of MIS: Data Collection: MIS systems gather data from various sources, both internal
 
Edited: Core Functions of MIS:







Data Collection:
MIS systems gather data from various sources, both internal and external to the organization. 



 













Data Processing:
Collected data is processed, analyzed, and transformed into meaningful information through various techniques. 



 












Information Storage:
Processed information is stored in a structured manner for easy access and retrieval. 



 












Information Dissemination:
The system distributes relevant information to the appropriate users in a timely manner. 



 












Decision Support:
MIS provides the information needed by managers to make informed decisions, solve problems, and plan for the future. 



 











Key Components of MIS:




Hardware: The physical components of the system, such as computers, servers, and networks. 



 




Software: The applications and programs used to process and analyze data. 



 




People: Individuals who operate and maintain the system and utilize the information it provides. 



 




Procedures: The established rules and processes for using the system. 



 




Data: The raw facts and figures collected and processed by the system. 
Posted by: Scarlet Ethan Edien
post image
Posted on: #iteachmsu
user pic
Posted by about 2 months ago
post image
Edited: Core Functions of MIS:
Data Collection:
MIS systems gather data from various sources, both internal and external to the organization.
Data Processing:
Collected data is processed, analyzed, and transformed into meaningful information through various techniques.
Information Storage:
Processed information is stored in a structured manner for easy access and retrieval.
Information Dissemination:
The system distributes relevant information to the appropriate users in a timely manner.
Decision Support:
MIS provides the information needed by managers to make informed decisions, solve problems, and plan for the future.
Key Components of MIS:
Hardware: The physical components of the system, such as computers, servers, and networks.
Software: The applications and programs used to process and analyze data.
People: Individuals who operate and maintain the system and utilize the information it provides.
Procedures: The established rules and processes for using the system.
Data: The raw facts and figures collected and processed by the system.

Posted on: #iteachmsu
user pic
Posted by about 2 months ago
Edited: Core Functions of MIS:
Data Collection:
MIS systems gather data from various sources, both internal and external to the organization.
Data Processing:
Collected data is processed, analyzed, and transformed into meaningful information through various techniques.
Information Storage:
Processed information is stored in a structured manner for easy access and retrieval.
Information Dissemination:
The system distributes relevant information to the appropriate users in a timely manner.
Decision Support:
MIS provides the information needed by managers to make informed decisions, solve problems, and plan for the future.
Key Components of MIS:
Hardware: The physical components of the system, such as computers, servers, and networks.
Software: The applications and programs used to process and analyze data.
People: Individuals who operate and maintain the system and utilize the information it provides.
Procedures: The established rules and processes for using the system.
Data: The raw facts and figures collected and processed by the system.

Posted on: #iteachmsu
Disciplinary Content
Wednesday, Jul 30, 2025
Parent group playlist by admin: Key aspects of API testing:
Direct interaction:
API tests send requests directly to API endpoints and analyze the responses to ensure they meet expected outcomes. This involves checking status codes, response times, and the structure and content of the data returned.
Focus on business logic:
API testing primarily validates the underlying business rules and data flow within an application, independent of the user interface.
Early defect detection:
By testing APIs early in the development lifecycle, issues can be identified and resolved before they become more complex and costly to fix in later stages.
Automation potential:
API tests are highly automatable, allowing for frequent and efficient execution, which is crucial for continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) pipelines.
Types of API tests:
This can include functional testing (verifying core functionality), performance testing (measuring response times under load), security testing (identifying vulnerabilities), and integration testing (ensuring seamless communication between APIs and external services).
Authored by: Admin
Loading..
Posted on 1: #iteachmsu
Parent group playlist by admin: Key aspects of API testing:
Direct interaction:
API tests send requests directly to API endpoints and analyze the responses to ensure they meet expected outcomes. This involves checking status codes, response times, and the structure and content of the data returned.
Focus on business logic:
API testing primarily validates the underlying business rules and data flow within an application, independent of the user interface.
Early defect detection:
By testing APIs early in the development lifecycle, issues can be identified and resolved before they become more complex and costly to fix in later stages.
Automation potential:
API tests are highly automatable, allowing for frequent and efficient execution, which is crucial for continuous integration and continuous delivery (CI/CD) pipelines.
Types of API tests:
This can include functional testing (verifying core functionality), performance testing (measuring response times under load), security testing (identifying vulnerabilities), and integration testing (ensuring seamless communication between APIs and external services).
DISCIPLINARY CONTENT
Authored by: Admin
Wednesday, Jul 30, 2025
Loading..
Posted on: Management is the process of planning, organizing, leading, and controlling resources
Monday, Jul 14, 2025
What is Management? Definition, Functions And Levels Explained
Companies and organisations need effective management to achieve business goals. There are different levels of management that aim to organise and coordinate the business functions of a company. If you're interested in becoming a manager, knowing about what a manager does can help you get an idea about the role. In this article, we discuss what management is and its unique characteristics, objectives, levels and functions.
Posted by: Scarlet Ethan Edien
post image
Posted on: #iteachmsu
user pic
Posted by 2 months ago
post image
rimer text from The College of William & Mary

ADHD is one of the most commonly diagnosed conditions of children (Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, 2015).

In a 2016 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study, scientists found that 6.1 million children aged 2-17 years living in the U.S. had been diagnosed with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), which is similar to previous en
Ages 6-11: Approximately 2.4 million children
Ages 12-17: Approximately 3.3 million children

Posted on: #iteachmsu
user pic
Posted by 4 months ago
post image
The IoT-Based Smart Farming Cycle
The core of IoT is the data you can draw from things and transmit over the internet. To optimize the farming process, IoT devices installed on a farm should collect and process data in a repetitive cycle that enables farmers to react quickly to emerging issues and changes in ambient conditions. Smart farming follows a cycle similar to this one:

1. Observation . Sensors record observational data from the crops, livestock, soil, or atmosphere.

2. Diagnostics. The sensor values are fed to a cloud-hosted IoT platform with predefined decision rules and models—also called "business logic"—that ascertain the condition of the examined object and identify any deficiencies or needs.

3. Decisions . The user and/or the machine learning-driven components of the IoT platform assess the revealed issues to decide if location-specific treatment is necessary.

4. Action . After end-user evaluation and action, the cycle repeats from the beginning.

Posted on: Smoke test group : What is Smart Farming? It's The Future of Agriculture -- edited
Disciplinary Content
Thursday, Apr 17, 2025
Smoke test: What is Smart Farming? It's The Future of Agriculture -- edited
The Internet of Things (IoT) has provided ways to improve nearly every industry imaginable. In agriculture, IoT has not only provided solutions to often time-consuming and tedious tasks but is totally changing the way we think about agriculture. What exactly is a smart farm, though? Here is a rundown of what smart farming is and how it's changing agriculture.

What is a Smart Farm?
Smart farming refers to managing farms using modern Information and communication technologies to increase the quantity and quality of products while optimizing the human labor required.

Among the technologies available for present-day farmers are:

Sensors: soil, water, light, humidity, temperature management
Software:  specialized software solutions that target specific farm types or applications agnostic IoT platforms
Connectivity: cellular, LoRa
Location: GPS, Satellite
Robotics: Autonomous tractors, processing facilities
Data analytics: standalone analytics solutions, data pipelines for downstream solutions -- edited
Authored by: Scarlet Ethan Edien
Loading..
Posted on 1: Smoke test group : What is Smart Farming? It's The Future of Agriculture -- edited
Smoke test: What is Smart Farming? It's The Future of Agriculture -- edited
The Internet of Things (IoT) has provided ways to improve nearly every industry imaginable. In agriculture, IoT has not only provided solutions to often time-consuming and tedious tasks but is totally changing the way we think about agriculture. What exactly is a smart farm, though? Here is a rundown of what smart farming is and how it's changing agriculture.

What is a Smart Farm?
Smart farming refers to managing farms using modern Information and communication technologies to increase the quantity and quality of products while optimizing the human labor required.

Among the technologies available for present-day farmers are:

Sensors: soil, water, light, humidity, temperature management
Software:  specialized software solutions that target specific farm types or applications agnostic IoT platforms
Connectivity: cellular, LoRa
Location: GPS, Satellite
Robotics: Autonomous tractors, processing facilities
Data analytics: standalone analytics solutions, data pipelines for downstream solutions -- edited
DISCIPLINARY CONTENT
Authored by: Scarlet Ethan Edien
Thursday, Apr 17, 2025
Loading..
icon busy for category details