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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 203 of 309

  • Platform Engineering Team

    Platform engineering team is a cross-functional product team that designs, builds, and operates internal platforms that provide reusable, self-service capabilities for software delivery, infrastructure, and operations, enabling enterprises to standardize delivery practices and embed governance and security controls for development teams.

  • Platform Engineering Tools

    Platform engineering tools are software products and frameworks that enterprises use to build and operate internal developer platforms, enabling standardized, self-service delivery of infrastructure, deployment workflows, and shared services under consistent architectural, security, and governance controls.

  • Platform Security

    Platform security is the discipline of protecting the hardware, firmware, operating system, and runtime environment that host enterprise workloads, providing a trusted foundation for applications, data, and services and supporting compliance, risk management, and operational resilience objectives.

  • Playbook Automation

    Playbook automation is the use of software to execute predefined, multi-step workflows for operational tasks such as security incidents or IT events. It matters because it standardizes responses, reduces manual effort, and supports consistent, auditable operations in enterprise environments.

  • Pod Autoscaler

    Pod autoscaler is a Kubernetes controller that automatically adjusts the number of pod replicas in a workload based on metrics such as CPU utilization or custom signals, helping enterprises balance application performance with infrastructure cost and resource efficiency.

  • Points of Presence

    Points of presence are physical network access locations where providers or enterprises house equipment and interconnections to expose their networks or services. They matter because their placement affects latency, routing, connectivity options, cost structures, and governance for distributed digital services.

  • Polarization Encoding

    Polarization encoding is a technique that represents classical bits or quantum states using the polarization of photons in optical communication systems, relevant to enterprises for optical capacity planning, polarization-division multiplexing, and quantum key distribution pilots integrated with existing network and security architectures.

  • Polarization Qubit

    Polarization qubit is a quantum bit encoded in the polarization state of a single photon, using orthogonal polarization modes as logical basis states. It matters in enterprises exploring quantum communication, quantum key distribution, and integration of quantum channels with existing optical networks.

  • Policy as Code

    Policy as code is the practice of expressing security, compliance, and operational rules in machine-readable code so automated systems can evaluate and enforce them consistently, providing traceable, version-controlled control mechanisms across infrastructure, platforms, and enterprise applications.

  • Policy Automation

    Policy automation is the use of software to encode and execute organizational policies, laws, and regulations as explicit rules, enabling consistent, auditable decisions across enterprise systems and processes while separating policy logic from application code for controlled change and governance.

  • Policy-Based Resource Governance

    Policy-based resource governance is a rules-driven approach that uses declarative policies and automated enforcement points to control how digital resources are provisioned, configured, accessed, and used in enterprise environments, supporting consistent security, compliance, and operational governance across heterogeneous systems.

  • Policy-Based Resource Manager

    Policy-based resource manager is a control component that allocates and governs IT resources by enforcing machine-readable policies, enabling enterprises to maintain consistent configuration, governance, and service objectives across complex, multi-tenant, and hybrid infrastructure without relying on ad hoc manual changes.

  • Policy-Based Workload Placement

    Policy-based workload placement is the automated assignment of workloads to infrastructure resources according to predefined policies that encode business, security, compliance, and performance requirements, enabling consistent, rule-driven deployment decisions across hybrid, multicloud, and edge environments in enterprise architectures.

  • Policy Compliance Engine

    Policy compliance engine is a software component that evaluates systems and configurations against codified policies or controls, producing automated compliance results and evidence that help enterprises manage regulatory, security, and governance requirements across infrastructure, applications, and data platforms.

  • Policy Decision Point

    Policy decision point is a logical authorization component that evaluates access control policies against request attributes and returns permit-or-deny decisions, enabling centralized, auditable access governance for applications, APIs, data platforms, and zero trust architectures in enterprise environments.

  • Policy Distribution Gateway

    Policy Distribution Gateway is a control-plane component that receives centrally defined security or network policies and distributes them securely and consistently to downstream enforcement points, helping enterprises maintain governance, consistency, and auditability of policies across heterogeneous or hybrid IT environments.

  • Policy-Driven Orchestration Engine

    Policy-driven orchestration engine is a software control component that automates and coordinates infrastructure or application workflows according to explicit, machine-readable policies, enabling consistent enforcement of performance, security, reliability, and governance objectives across complex enterprise, cloud, and hybrid technology environments.

  • Policy Enforcement Engine

    Policy enforcement engine is a software component that evaluates and applies machine-readable security, access, or governance policies to control actions on systems, data, or services, supporting centralized authorization, compliance, and consistent control enforcement across enterprise applications and infrastructure.

  • Policy Enforcement Point

    Policy enforcement point is a component in access control and zero trust architectures that intercepts requests to protected resources and enforces centrally managed security policies, enabling consistent authorization, monitoring, and governance across applications, data, networks, and infrastructure in enterprise environments.

  • Policy Engine

    Policy engine is a software component that evaluates centrally defined, machine-readable rules to return authorization, compliance, or configuration decisions, enabling enterprises to externalize policy logic from applications and infrastructure while maintaining consistent, auditable governance across heterogeneous systems and environments.