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Enterprise Technology Glossary

Definitions, concepts, acronyms, and terminology used across enterprise technology markets.

The Decision Insights Glossary provides definitions and explanations for technology terms, acronyms, products, architectures, standards, and industry concepts used throughout enterprise IT.

Entries are designed to help technology professionals, business leaders, researchers, and students quickly understand terminology spanning networking, cloud computing, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, software development, infrastructure, observability, telecommunications, and related domains.

Use the search bar to find specific terms, concepts, acronyms, technologies, or industry terminology.

6,173 results ยท page 180 of 309

  • Network Isolation

    Network isolation is a security and architecture practice that restricts or segments network connectivity so systems or services communicate only through defined paths and policies, supporting containment of security incidents, compliance with segmentation requirements, and controlled connectivity across enterprise environments.

  • Network Isolation Policy

    Network isolation policy is a formal set of network security rules that define and enforce which systems may communicate and under what conditions, helping enterprises reduce attack surfaces, contain lateral movement, and align connectivity controls with risk and compliance requirements.

  • Network Latency Monitor

    Network latency monitor is a tool that measures and analyzes delay and jitter for data packets across network paths, enabling enterprises to observe performance levels, support incident triage, validate service levels, and inform capacity and connectivity planning decisions.

  • Network Latency Profiling

    Network latency profiling is the practice of measuring and analyzing network delay across paths, endpoints, and services so enterprises can understand baseline performance, detect anomalies or bottlenecks, and make informed decisions about capacity planning, routing, and distributed application architecture.

  • Network Management System

    Network management system is a centralized software platform that monitors, configures, and controls network devices and services in enterprise and carrier environments, providing telemetry, fault and performance management, and operational data that supports availability, compliance, and coordinated IT and security operations.

  • Network Map

    Network map is a visual or logical representation of network devices, connections, and communication paths used for monitoring, troubleshooting, planning, and security management in enterprise environments. It supports visibility into topology, dependencies, segmentation, and data flows across complex hybrid infrastructures.

  • Network Monitoring

    Network monitoring is the systematic collection and analysis of telemetry about network devices, links, and traffic to track availability, performance, and security-relevant conditions. It matters in enterprises because it supports reliability, incident response, capacity planning, and compliance-focused continuous monitoring.

  • Network Namespace

    Network namespace is an operating system feature that isolates network stack resources such as interfaces, IP addresses, and routing tables per workload, which supports multi-tenant separation, container networking, and controlled environments on shared infrastructure in enterprise and cloud-native architectures.

  • Network Observability Platform

    Network observability platform is an integrated software system that ingests and correlates network telemetry to provide unified visibility into performance, reliability, and security across on-premises, hybrid, and multi-cloud networks, supporting troubleshooting, incident response, compliance reporting, and alignment between operations, security, and application stakeholders.

  • Network-on-Chip

    Network-on-chip is an on-chip communication fabric that connects processing cores and other components within a system-on-chip using packet-switched networking concepts, which matters to enterprises because it affects performance, scalability, power behavior and security properties of CPUs, GPUs and specialized accelerators.

  • Network Operations Center

    Network operations center is a centralized operations function that monitors, manages, and maintains enterprise networks and related infrastructure to support availability, performance, and security of network-dependent services for business operations, often in coordination with security and other IT operations teams.

  • Network Operator

    Network operator is an organization or administrative entity that manages and provides communication network infrastructure and services for data, voice, or other electronic traffic, enabling connectivity, performance management, and compliance for enterprises, service providers, and public communication systems.

  • Network Optimization Feedback Loop

    Network optimization feedback loop is a closed process that uses continuous telemetry and performance measurements to automatically adjust network configurations and policies, helping enterprises maintain defined service levels, reliability objectives, and efficient resource use across wide-area, data center, and cloud-connected environments.

  • Network Optimization Suite

    Network Optimization Suite is a bundled software or cloud-based platform that monitors and tunes enterprise network traffic across WAN, data center, and cloud environments to improve application performance, reliability, and resource utilization for distributed users and workloads.

  • Network Outage

    Network outage is a loss or major degradation of network connectivity that prevents normal communication among systems, services, or users in an enterprise environment, and it matters because it disrupts digital operations, service availability, and obligations under service-level and regulatory requirements.

  • Network Overlay

    Network overlay is a virtual networking layer built on top of an existing physical or logical network that uses encapsulation to create isolated, programmable connectivity domains, enabling enterprises to segment traffic and manage connectivity independently of the underlying infrastructure.

  • Network Overlays

    Network overlays are logical networks that run on top of existing physical or IP infrastructure, encapsulating traffic to create isolated virtual segments. They matter in enterprise environments because they enable multitenancy, segmentation and policy consistency without altering the underlying network fabric.

  • Network Packet Broker

    Network packet broker is a visibility-layer component that aggregates, filters, and routes mirrored network traffic from taps or span ports to monitoring, security, and analytics tools, enabling controlled tool utilization and consistent traffic access across complex enterprise and service provider networks.

  • Network Packet Capture

    Network packet capture is the process of intercepting and recording network packets for inspection and analysis, used in enterprises for security monitoring, incident response, troubleshooting, and compliance, and integrated with broader logging and telemetry to support reliable network and security operations.

  • Network Peering

    Network peering is an arrangement in which two or more autonomous systems interconnect and exchange IP traffic directly, typically without transit fees. It matters in enterprise contexts because it supports cost control, performance management, and routing control across internet and cloud connectivity.