重要提示:请勿将账号共享给其他人使用,违者账号将被封禁!
查看《购买须知》>>>
首页 > 计算机应用技术> 微机原理及应用
网友您好,请在下方输入框内输入要搜索的题目:
搜题
拍照、语音搜题,请扫码下载APP
扫一扫 下载APP
题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
[主观题]

EDI(Electronic Data Interchange,电子数据交换)是按照协议对具有一定结构特征的标准信息,经数据

EDI(Electronic Data Interchange,电子数据交换)是按照协议对具有一定结构特征的标准信息,经数据通信网络在计算机系统之间进行交换和自动处理,以【 】的方式将结构化的信息按照协议将标准化文件通过计算机网络传送。

答案
查看答案
更多“EDI(Electronic Data Interchange,电子数据交换)是按照协议对具有一定结构特征的标准信息,经数据”相关的问题

第1题

Format means the data ______ in which the electronic record is expressed or to which it refers. Form
at is used to describe the system language or protocol in which the electronic record is encoded.
点击查看答案

第2题

Electronic Data Interchange For Administration,Commerce and Transport 是电子数据交换标准的缩写。()
Electronic Data Interchange For Administration,Commerce and Transport 是电子数据交换标准的缩写。()

A.错误

B.正确

点击查看答案

第3题

A computer file is a collection of ______ data, used to organize the storage and processing of data by computer.
A computer file is a collection of ______ data, used to organize the storage and processing of data by computer.

A. electrical

B. artificial

C. electronic

D. genuine

点击查看答案

第4题

If an electronic record evidencing transport does not indicate a date of shipment or dispatch, the d
ate of ______ of the electronic record will be deemed to be the date of shipment or dispatch. However, if the electronic record bears a notation that evidences the date of shipment or dispatch, the date of the ______ will be deemed to be the date of shipment or dispatch. A notation showing additional data content need not be separately signed or otherwise authenticated.
点击查看答案

第5题

Electronic record means: (1)______ created, generated, sent, communicated, received, or stored by e

Electronic record means:

(1)______ created, generated, sent, communicated, received, or stored by electronic means

(2)that is capable of being ______ as to the apparent identity of a sender and the apparent source of the data contained in it, and as to whether it has remained complete and unaltered, and

(3)is capable of being ______ for compliance with the terms and conditions of the eUCP Credit.

点击查看答案

第6题

According to the passage, your electronic application will not be outstanding if you______
.

A.list a strong objective

B.consult a career counselor

C.enter the data in the correct field

D.miss the optional assessment test

点击查看答案

第7题

Data processing is a series of operations carried out on data to get information.【C1】_____
_series of operations is also called the data processing cycle. Data are a group of facts called the input(输入). The data may be numbers, letters, or symbols【C2】______may or may not be related. The information is the end, result or the output. Information is data that have been processed. It is【C3】______a brief, usable form. The operations are performed with different tools. A computer is【C4】______kind of data processing tool. The brain is also a data processing tool. The brain is like a small, personal computer that controls all bodily and mental【C5】______Data, or input, enter the brain through the senses(sight, smell, touch, taste and hearing). The data are【C6】______by the brain, and the result is information. The information or output may cause physical and mental reactions such as body movements, decisions, or ideas. How does the brain tell an apple【C7】______an orange? If the brain could not process data, this would not be possible. Apples and oranges differ in looks, feel, smell, and taste. The brain can tell these differences. The【C8】______in input help the brain to decide which is the apple and which is the orange. There are three levels of processing data.【C9】______level uses different tools. Some levels require less human effort than others. The three levels are manual data processing, electromechanical data processing and electronic data processing. In manual data processing, the brain, hands, and simple tools such as pencils and paper【C10】______Electromechanical data processing uses electrically operated machines. Examples of the types of machines which are used are desk calculators and typewriters. Electronic data processing uses electronic computers that process data at a very high speed.

【C1】

A.These

B.This

C.Such

D.A

点击查看答案

第8题

选出应填入下面一段英语中______内的正确答案。 With hundreds of rrullions of electronic (1) taking

选出应填入下面一段英语中______内的正确答案。

With hundreds of rrullions of electronic(1)taking place daily, businesses and organizations have a strong incentive to protect the(2)of the data exchanged in this manner, and to positively ensure the(3)of those involved in the transactions. This has led to an industry-wide quest for better, more secure methods for controlling IT operations, and for deploying strong security mechanisms deeply and broadly throughout networked infrastructures and client devices. One of the more successful concepts to engage the imaginations of the security community has been the development of standards-based security(4)that can be incorporated in the hardware design of client computers. The principle of encapsulating core security capabilities in(5)and integrating security provisions at the deepest levels of the machine operation has significant benefits for both users and those responsible for securing IT operations.

点击查看答案

第9题

选出应填入下面一段英语中______内的正确答案。 Future Computer Trends: The components of a PC will be

选出应填入下面一段英语中______内的正确答案。

Future Computer Trends:

The components of a PC will be built into the(1)and large plasma or electroluminesent flat panel display hanging on a partition wall act as both a(2)and videophone display.

A high resolution, touch sensitive LCD(3)into desktop will allow pen-based pointing and data input. In the home, meanwhile, computers will become as ubiquitous as TVs.

Computer interfaces will be far friendlier than(4)graphical user interfaces (GUI) of today. Computer will use "human interfaces" based on multimedia.

RISC microprocessors will finally obliterate the ever thinning gap between workstations and PCs. Similar advances in nonvolatile flash memory will lead to the replacement of magnetic(5)disks with electronic "silicon disks".

供选择的答案:

(1) build (2) monitor (3) desk (4) built

(5) mouse-drive (6) keyboard (7) touch-sensitive (8) soft

(9) hard (10) optical

点击查看答案

第10题

E-Business 电子商务 There is no universally accepted definition of e-Business, but here we assume

E-Business

电子商务

There is no universally accepted definition of e-Business, but here we assume that it embraces all aspects of buying and selling products and services over a network. The essential characteristics of e-Business are that the dealings between two parties, be it business to consumer or business to business, are online transactions, and that the key commodity being traded is information.

Figure 1 The Essential Elements of an Electronic Business

In effect, we see e-Business as the gateway to a deal—it is a transaction that may, but doesn't necessarily have to, lead to the delivery of a physical product. There are several commonly used names for e-Business, the most popular being e-Commerce and e-Trade. Some of the more academic treatises attempt to distinguish the terms (for instance, e- Commerce is sometimes limited to the buying and selling of goods and the flows of associated information and funds; e-Trade can be viewed as covering only supplier to supplier transactions). We have used such terms as synonyms here, and we take them as referring to the same thing.

Figure 1 gives some idea of how the key elements fit together. It should be said that the perspective is intended to be general, and should fit business to business trade as well as the case where individual consumers interact with an online business. So you can "daisy chain"[1]the picture, such that someone who takes the role of supplier to one set of customers may also take the role of customer to a different supplier further back in the chain. In any case, they all have to be on a shared network, work from the same catalogue, have some means of delivering goods, and be able to settle up after the transaction.

THE WHISTLE STOP TOUR

So far, we have described e-Business in broad terms as a mass market capability that is enabled by a combination of the Internet's global reach and the vast resources of traditional Information Technology. Given this, it should come as no surprise[2]that it is a multi faceted beast or, potentially, a many headed monster. Many of those facets are technical, but others are not.

To get a grasp on the overall scope and nature of the e-Business proposition, this section looks at the constituent parts of trading over a network. There is a lot more detail on each of these areas later on. For now, though, we have the surfer's guide.

The Marketplace

Before we think about business, we should first think about the market where that business is conducted. So, what is an electronic market? It can be viewed as direct parallel of the familiar shop, store or emporium. It is, in essence, a virtual trading area where deals are struck over a network. The "shop front" is the computer and the server is the warehouse. In fact, there is an electronic analogue of virtually all of the items you'd find in a conventional market—including bogus traders, inferior goods and dubious bargains.

The size and scope of the marketplace is, however, a little different from the familiar high street model. In e-Business, unlike many other areas of high technology, size really does not matter. It is quite possible to conduct a large volume of business over a wide area with little overhead. The "information smallholder" can compete on an equal footing with the multinational corporation. In fact, it is often not that easy to distinguish between the two. People who have encountered Amazon. com on the Internet probably have no idea how it compares in size with, say, W. H. Smith, who have bookshops in most large towns in the UK, or Blackwells, who position themselves as global suppliers of academic books[3].

To be an effective player—as well as the basic technology to enter the market you need a brand, some content, service support and a means of fulfilment (i. e. delivering the goods). This does not imply that all have be owned. An e-Business that looks like a cogent entity to the consumer may in reality be a host of co operating suppliers. One supplier might provide the online content and another the application hosting. The delivery vans might be contracted from the Post Office or Federal Express, and they might deliver a set of products branded by someone completely different. In this respect, the electronic market is a more complex beast than the traditional one of manufacturer, retailer and wholesaler.

Furthermore, the nature of e-Business lends itself to more than one trading model. For instance, the age old idea of a marketplace owned by oneorganisation, populated by authorised traders is quite tenable. This model can be extended to add the idea of having "guilds" that control standards within their particular area.

There are many other trading models, such as conventional auction and then there is barter—e-Business draws on a lot of history! All have their merits and are suitable to a certain type of trading. Most online trading models have a physical dual, some don't.

Whatever the market looks like, it can often becategorised by the dominant party. In seller driven markets, it is the large, dominant vender who sets the price, not really for negotiation; in a buyer driven markets there are many people selling into the market, and a small number of dominant buyers who take best bids, for example, UK supermarkets are often accused of having undue influence—downwards—on the price of agricultural produce. It iS these dynamics that determine the appropriate technology for e-Business. There are also open markets in which the buyer and seller negotiate, or a free market, where the behaviour of the market itself sets prices. Insurance brokering is an example of this, as are the optimization packages used for pricing and selling airline seat capacity.

e-Shops

The electronic shop can be thought of as the "look and feel[4]" of the screen that fronts the customer. Just as with high street stores, the aim is to entice the customer to browse and ultimately, to buy.

Although unlikely to supplant real world shops, the online variety can provide features that seem likely to promote their growth. As well as being readily available and easy to search, they can provide some measure of masscustomisation. For instance, the made to measure shirtmaker, Charles Tyrwhitt has an online shop that can apply a buyer's previously entered measurements and preferences as it mails each order from the Jermyn Street shop. Every customer is thus treated as an individual, but there is capacity to cater for a mass market.

The fundamental prerequisite for presenting products and services online in the e- Business world is the catalogue. These are central, and are the electronic equivalent of a shop's shelves, goods, special offers and departments. The catalogue is the onlinerepresentation of what is "for sale" (or more correctly, what is available for trading).

It is important to appreciate that there are different scales of catalogue. They range from a set of web pages and a simple script that allows orders to be taken through mid range catalogue products that arecharacterised by a pre-defined structure of product categories and sub categories, up to large scale corporate catalogues that are customisable. In this last case, there is usually back end integration with inventory, stock control and ordering systems.

Another important point about catalogues is that they are different for buyers and for sellers. The former is a virtual directory that allows the buyer to look at and judge a range of competing products from a number of different suppliers. The latter is a structured set of information that represents what a particular supplier has to sell. The technology used to represent these different types of catalogue has to match, that is, it either has to beoptimised for one seller and multiple buyers, or vice versa. More on this later.

One further differentiation in catalogues that should be made is that of business to business as opposed to business to consumer. The consumer oriented catalogues tend to be stronger on presentation, as they usually have to sell on the basis of eye appeal. The business catalogues are more focused on quick access to another business' needs, and these tend to be high volume and fairly routine. For instance, many supermarkets issue stock replenishment orders from their automated stock control systems they buya lot of carrots on a regular basis!

In short, the distinction between consumer and business oriented catalogues is akin to food mart against delicatessen.

Payment

So to the core of any business (and e-Business is no exception )—profit. Trade, commerce and business only exist to satisfy the needs and desires of the participants. This means one party getting something they want in exchange for something the other party wants; and usually it is money that fuels the desire to trade.

By its very nature, e-Business needs to emulate in some way the customary direct exchange of cash for goods. Attitudes to the use of different payment mechanisms are changing and vary when considering Europe, the US, Asia Pacific or the whole world. A priority in establishing an e-Business is to put in place an acceptable mechanism for payment. There are many technical options, and to choose appropriately, factors such as scale and acceptability all need to be carefully examined.

By way of illustration, there are various scales of payment to be considered: items such as books are regularly purchased electronically, and it is common for a single customer to buy a single book and pay with a single credit card transaction (probably in the $10 range). However, the cost of processing credit card transactions is quite high, and may not be economical for the purchase of small value items such as consumer reports or individual music tracks, which would typically be in the $110 range. Technologies exist for handling these small value payments (known as "micropayments"), and lumping them together into single credit card transactions. The range below $1 is often referred to as the area of "nanopayments". Such payments may represent, for example, the price of viewing an individual Internet page of information.

Not only are different technologies required to aggregate these various categories of small scale payments, but also the e-Business will need to put in place different strategies for such things as handling account queries and dealing with bad debts. For instance, a sensible way of dealing with lost nanopayments would be to write off the debts and blacklist the offenders—the cost of recovering the debt would be too high.

Settlement

It is all very well taking: a "virtual" payment for goods or services offered over the Internet but, at some point, this must be converted into dollar bills, Euros, or some other tangible form of money. Hence, we need a gateway between the virtual world and the real world—a payments gateway. This can be effected with automated connection to Merchant acquirers[5], direct debits, or other systems.

Of course, traditional settlements are not mandatory. In the past, people have used all kinds of different objects to represent money: leaves, sticks, beads and even bits of metal or pieces of printed paper! In the electronic world there are additional possibilities, such as token based systems, where you first buy a number of tokens, in your chosen currency, and are then free to spend them on goods which are priced in tokens. An example of this is web "beanz" which are rather like on line loyalty card points. Electronic wallets and smart cards provide another alternative. Some of these types of electronic cash are fully portable, whereas others retain your wallet on your PC or on a server.

Presentation

As with catalogues, the way in which online products and services are presented depends upon the market. For the electronic shop, the art of window dressing is not really one that has transferred online as yet. Already the ease of use of online systems is coming under the scrutiny of consumer watchdogs such as Which? Magazine, who report a significant impact of true presentation quality.

When there are many suppliers, the look and feel of the shop will make a big difference, as will the ease of use. In much the same vein, business to business transactions will need to be reliable and easy to use, in their own way.

The design of online information is very much in its infancy, but there are some basic guidelines for getting the right presence and operation for the job in hand. Navigational dead ends, inconsistent and out of date information, lack of an overall information map, frustrating and non intuitive structures and poor search/browse capabilities all put customers off. The electronic window dresser is one of a number of new skills being driven by e-Business.

One of the interesting twists to presenting what you have to offer online is that it is possible to find out exactly what each customer has looked at, what they purchased and when. This would consume a huge amount of time and video to do in a conventionalshop, but consists of little more than analysing system logs for an e-Business. Information about individual customers, their browsing and buying patterns, is an important piece of feedback on how to go about presenting your goods.

Security

In the "real" world you go into a shop to make somejudgement from its location, size, type of premises, how long it has been there, and so on, and you hand over cash in return for goods which you carry away. The risks are very small, and even if things do go wrong, you can usually exchange the faulty goods. You know where to go back to and who to talk to. If you don't get satisfaction you can even, as a last resort, make a scene, standing in the middle of a busy store, telling an assistant, as loudly as you are able, how badly you have been treated, can elicit rapid solutions to your problems.

When trading over the Internet, things are not so simple, the dream of the virtual trader can suddenly become a nightmare. For example, how do consumers know that the company they are dealing with is reputable, and is what it purports to be? Conversely, how does the trader know that the consumer is not using stolen credit card details?

Furthermore, how do both parties ensure that their transaction takes place privately without someone else snooping on it or, even worse, tinkering with the transaction details while they are in transit across the network? And when things go wrong as they inevitably do, what sorts of mechanism are there to ensure that both parties fulfill their obligations?

Secret codes have long been used to ensure the privacy of, information that must be sent byuntrusted carriers or public networks, in 1660, it was said that such codes were certainly for use by English aristocrats communicating with the exiled King Charles. In e- Business, the principle is the same, although the codes need to be a lot stronger because the potential eavesdroppers are sophisticated, and are assumed to have access to powerful computers and software.

There are many ways of establishing a secure communications link. Basically, for two people to be able to communicate using a code, they must "share a secret", and this secret must be denied to everyone else. The problem is how a trader and a consumer whowill probably never meet agree on a secret code that cannot be guessed by anyone else. The answer is to use a type of coding which employs a so called "asymmetric code". This is one in which the message is encoded using one key and decoded using a different key. In this instance, getting a copy of the encoding key, the so called "public" key, does not allow you to decode the message for that you need the other, "private", key.

Even if a link is secure, you need to know that it is the one you wanted. So, when you access an Internet site that calls itself First National Bank, you want to be sure that it is truly what it purports to be before you engage in a financial transaction with it. The way this is done is to have the site certified by a "trusted third party", who checks the authenticity of the site and provides certified copies of that site's "public key" for communicating securely. There are a number of types of certificates that are issued by such trusted third parties, each with its own level of trustworthiness and area of application.

Finally, what happens if something goes wrong? There has to be some means of checking who promised what to whom, and when. The concept of non repudiation proving that a deal was struck is one that needs to be transferred into the world of e-Business. Thisis where verifiable records, and digital signatures fit.

A successful e-Business should consider and have viable policies, approaches and, solutions to all of the above issues. In addition, there is the small but important practicality that a certain amount of infrastructure has to be established before you can actually begin to trade online. The established mechanism for inter company transactions is known as Electronic Data Interchange (EDI[6]). There are established standards, and an established body of know how in how to link to the fulfillment, inventory and other back end systems that make it possible to automate the end to end e-Business process, from ordering through to delivery. The "behind the scenes[7]" aspects are an important part of the overall picture, and will be explained fully as we unfold our story.

Notes

[1] daisy chain: 串级链。

[2] Given this, it should come as no surprise: 假如情况是这样,…也不会令人吃惊。

[3] W. H. Smith, who have bookshops in most large towns in the UK, or Blackwells, who position themselves as global suppliers of academic books. W. H. Smith是英国的书店名。Blackwells是全球最大的学术书供应商。

[4] look and feel: 品质,观感。

[5] Merchant acquirers: (在线)收单会员,验证机构。

[6] Electronic Data Interchange(EDI): 电子数据交换(机)。

[7] behind the scenes: 在后台,在幕后。

Choose the best answer for each of the following:

点击查看答案

第11题

Have a look at Paragraphs 4 to 6 to find out the comparisons made between Russia and China. Then fil
l out the chart below.

Paras. 4-6

Still, there's little dispute that communications will be a key factor separating the winners from the losers. Consider Russia. Because of its strong educational system in mathematics and science, it should thrive in the Information Age. The problem is its national phone system is a rusting antique that dates from the 1930s. To lick this problem, Russia is starting to install optical fiber and has a strategic plan to pump $40 billion into various communications projects. But its economy is stuck in recession and it barely has the money to even scratch the surface of the problem.

Compare that with the mainland of China. Over the next decade, it plans to pour some $100 billion into telecommunications equipment. In a way, China's backwardness is an advantage, because the expansion occurs just as new technologies are becoming cheaper than copper wire systems. By the end of 1995, each of China's provincial capitals except for Lhasa will have digital switches and high-capacity optical fiber links. This means that major cities are getting the basic infrastructure to become major parts of the information superhighway, allowing people to log on to the most advanced services available.

Telecommunications is also a key to Shanghai's dream of becoming a top financial center. To offer peak performance in providing the electronic data and paperless trading global investors expect, Shanghai plans telecommunications networks as powerful as those in Manhattan.

There's little dispute about communications being a key factor separating the winners from the losers.

Russia: A strong educational system in mathematic and science.

China: Backwardness.

Russian development was held up by its national phone system, a rusting antique.

China takes advantage of its backwardness because ____________.

Russia plans to ____________.

China plans to pour some $100 billion into telecommunication equipment.

Russian economy is stuck in recession and ____________.

China has the money to invest. (Implied)

Russia: A loser. (Implied)

Nothing mentioned to show achievements so far.

China: A winner (Implied)

China's major cities are ____________. Telecommunications helps Shanghai to realize its dream of ____________.

点击查看答案
下载APP
关注公众号
TOP
重置密码
账号:
旧密码:
新密码:
确认密码:
确认修改
购买搜题卡查看答案 购买前请仔细阅读《购买须知》
请选择支付方式
  • 微信支付
  • 支付宝支付
点击支付即表示同意并接受了《服务协议》《购买须知》
立即支付 系统将自动为您注册账号
已付款,但不能查看答案,请点这里登录即可>>>
请使用微信扫码支付(元)

订单号:

遇到问题请联系在线客服

请不要关闭本页面,支付完成后请点击【支付完成】按钮
遇到问题请联系在线客服
恭喜您,购买搜题卡成功 系统为您生成的账号密码如下:
重要提示:请勿将账号共享给其他人使用,违者账号将被封禁。
发送账号到微信 保存账号查看答案
怕账号密码记不住?建议关注微信公众号绑定微信,开通微信扫码登录功能
请用微信扫码测试
优题宝