An Investigation of the 5,000 Largest Enterprises in Taiwan in Terms of Their Revenue.DUBLIN, Ireland -- Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c59863) has announced the addition of "Taiwanese Large Enterprises' Demand for IT Applications and Software, 2005-2007" to their offering. Large enterprises have extensive resources, a wide business scope, and well-established management systems, thus are more receptive than small and medium enterprises to the adoption of new information and communications technology. To better understand Taiwanese large enterprises' demand for IT systems over the next two years, during the period from December 2005 to January 2006 we investigated the 5,000 largest enterprises in Taiwan in terms of their revenue. These companies were categorized by their revenue and the industries to which the enterprises belonged; the survey examined their network applications and their adoption of IT systems. 600 completed questionnaires were returned. This report will examine the results obtained in the survey. List of Topics: It analyzes the results of a survey on Taiwanese SEMs' IT system adoption, which was conducted between December 2005 and January 2006 by MIC (Market Intelligence Center). Survey covers network applications, such as website, EIP (1) (Enterprise Information Portal) See corporate portal. (2) (Extended Instruction Pointer) The program counter on x86 CPUs. , WLAN See wireless LAN. WLAN - wireless local area network , VPN (Virtual Private Network) A private network that is configured within a public network (a carrier's network or the Internet) in order to take advantage of the economies of scale and management facilities of large networks. , VoIP, and EIM EIM Enterprise Incentive Management EIM Enterprise Information Management EIM Enterprise Identity Mapping (IBM) EIM Enterprise Instant Messaging EIM Employee Internet Management EIM European Institute for the Media , as well as IT software, including ERP (Enterprise Resource Planning) An integrated information system that serves all departments within an enterprise. Evolving out of the manufacturing industry, ERP implies the use of packaged software rather than proprietary software written by or for one customer. , CRM, SCM (1) (Software Configuration Management, Source Code Management) See configuration management. (2) See supply chain management. , BI, e-learning, and BPM, adopted by Taiwanese SMEs for the period 2005-2007, with breakdowns by company size and industry sector. For more information visit http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c59863. |
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