Digital nervous system

Digital nervous system is a phrase, popularly associated with Bill Gates of Microsoft, used to describe a vision for how the IT infrastructure of an enterprise could be analogous to the autonomic nervous system of a biological organism. Gates made extensive use of the term in his 1999 book Business @ the Speed of Thought.[1] The actual phrase digital nervous system may not have originated with Gates however, as it has been reported that Judith Dayhoff used the term before Gates did.[2]

Steve Ballmer attempted to explain the digital nervous system by saying the following:

If you think of the human body, what does our nervous system let us do? It lets us hear, see, take input. It lets us think and analyze and plan. It lets us make decisions and communicate and take action. Every company essentially has a nervous system: companies take inputs, they think, they plan, they communicate, they take action. The question is how does the nervous system in your company operate? Is the IT infrastructure really adding value?[3]

Gates himself offered the following explanation as part of a keynote speech at Microsoft's Second Annual CEO Summit in 1998.

The term 'digital nervous system' is kind of an interesting one. The analogy, of course, is to the biological nervous system where you always have the information you need. You always are alert to the most important things, and you block out the information that's not important. And companies really need to have that same kind of thing: the information that's valuable getting to the people who need to know about it.[4]

Digital nervous system has also been described as being synonymous with the term 'Zero Latency Enterprise', another phrase representing the way an enterprise uses IT systems to rapidly communicate between customers, employees and trading partners.[5]

History

The term digital nervous systems was used in 1987–89 at the IBM Guide/Share Conference in a presentation originally titled "The Body Enterprise" later retitled "The Cybernetic Factory -- the next generation in CIM". The author/presenter Brian K Seitz was later a Microsoft employee and later a DMR Consultant contributing to Business @ The Speed of Thought through a series of interviews with his research staff arranged by a fellow DMR consultant Ricardo Buenaventura.

Mr Seitz had developed the concept and an architecture for business design based on the General Systems Theory by Ludwig von Bertalanffy taxonomy while designing a computer-integrated manufacturing system at Rockwell Int'l NAAO B1-B division in the mid-80s before joining IBM.[6]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 7/12/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.