Information from medium English, information from Anglo-Norman information, information, old French information, information from Latin ("formation, concept, education"), (from "to information"). Compare West Frisian ynformaasje ("information"), Dutch information ("information"), German information ("information"), Danish information ("information") and Swedish information ("information")
Things about a given subject and things you can know; knowledge about the dissemination of something. [From 14 days to c]
(Law) Statement of a criminal proceeding against a judge or a judge to a criminal judge or a judge; in the UK, accusing a judge or judge and requesting an arrest warrant. [From 15th c. ]
(Now rarely) the form of creation, giving a given quality and personality, formation, animation. [From 17th c. ]
The service offered by the telephone provides the telephone number listed by the user. [Starting on the 20th]
(Information technology) An ordered sequence of symbols (or signals) (which may include messages). [Starting from the end of the 20 th century]
The definition of information in the computing environment comes from the vocabulary of international standards. It is officially accepted, but it is almost ignored in the computing industry. [1]
Information exchange or information sharing is an informal term that can refer to bidirectional information transfer from telecommunications and computer science, or from the viewpoint of system theory or information theory. Since "information" in this context always refers to (electronic) data which encodes and expresses hand information, we can find a wider range of processing methods under data exchange. The term information sharing has a long history of information technology. Traditional information sharing means one-to-one data exchange between sender and recipient. These information exchanges are implemented through a number of open and proprietary protocols, messages, and file formats. Electronic data interchange (EDI) began in the late 1970s and succeeded in implementing commercial data exchange that is still in use.
Information technology focuses on the development of electronic networks that exchange information. Since all financial transactions involve information exchange, the growing popularity of online finance occurs simultaneously with the advancement of information technology. Professor Jane K. Winn of the University of Washington Law School says, "Financial institutions are leading the creation of a global information economy." Today's financing depends on information technology.
Health Information Technology (HIT) is a framework for managing health information and exchanging health information in digital form. Experts at HIT focus on the technical aspects of managing health information using software and hardware to manage and store patient data. HIT experts usually come from the background of information technology and support other systems used by EHR and HIM experts to protect health information. As technology advances, HIT experts must ensure that electronic data managed by HIM experts is maintained and exchanged accurately and efficiently.