Friday, October 18, 2013

What is the difference between information systems technology and information technology?

information technology
 on Information Technology by Nayeem Khan, A Business & Internet Leader
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My main goal was to major in Information Technology but from what I've heard and my counselor told me, I decided to settle for Information Systems Technology because it is a AS degree and does not involve as much Physics and Calculus. For those that plan on majoring in IT or already are, can you give me the expected yearly wage and basic difference in career fields?


Answer
Information Systems is a large umbrella referring to systems designed to create, store, manipulate, or disseminate information. Example of an information system is a pencil and a piece of paper. The two objects themselves are just tools, but together they create a system for writing (information). The term Information systems has been around a lot longer than the computer, or the term information technology. These days the two are sometimes thought to be synonymous, but that, in most cases is a misconception.

Information technology falls under the information systems umbrella, but has nothing to do with systems per say. IT deals with the technology involved in the systems themselves, e.g. an information system like wiki.answers.com contains many information technologies. Servers, server operating systems, web-server software (IIS, Apache, et al), and code written for the web-server software (PHP, C#, VB, PERL, Ruby, et al). Even your computer and browser make up part of this information system. Like the pencil and paper example, each one of the mentioned parts of this information system in itself is an information technology.

That being said, most people in the profession no longer make a distinction. Moreover, companies call their IS/IT department a wide range of titles based on more on culture and tradition than anything else.



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