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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 227 of 309

  • Reasoning Graph Compiler

    Reasoning graph compiler is a software component that converts high-level specifications of symbolic or neurosymbolic reasoning tasks into executable graph representations for solvers or AI systems, supporting enterprise decision logic, model governance, and integration of reasoning workflows into production architectures.

  • Reasoning Model

    Reasoning model is an artificial intelligence model or system that performs explicit multi-step inference to solve structured problems, providing traceable logic and constraints for tasks such as compliance, diagnostics, and decision support in enterprise architectures and governed data environments.

  • Reasoning Models

    Reasoning models are AI or machine learning models that perform explicit intermediate reasoning steps to solve multi-step tasks, which matters for enterprises that need traceable, rule-based decision support in areas such as compliance, planning, troubleshooting, and complex query handling.

  • Reconfigurable Compute Fabric

    Reconfigurable compute fabric is a programmable hardware architecture composed of reconfigurable logic and interconnects that implement custom compute functions after manufacturing, enabling enterprises to tailor acceleration for specific workloads while retaining flexibility to update algorithms, protocols, or processing pipelines over time.

  • Reconfigurable Computing

    Reconfigurable computing is a computer architecture approach that uses reprogrammable hardware, typically field-programmable gate arrays, to implement different hardware functions after deployment, which matters for enterprises that need adaptable acceleration for compute-intensive workloads and evolving algorithms without new silicon fabrication.

  • Reconfigurable Computing Fabric

    Reconfigurable computing fabric is a programmable hardware substrate, often based on field-programmable logic, that allows enterprises to alter processing resources and data paths after deployment, enabling hardware-level specialization for targeted workloads while retaining the ability to update or repurpose functions over time.

  • Reconfigurable Intelligent Surface

    Reconfigurable intelligent surface is a programmable electromagnetic structure that uses many tunable elements to control how radio waves reflect or refract, enabling network planners to adjust wireless propagation for coverage, interference management, and energy efficiency in enterprise and carrier environments.

  • Record Count Verification

    Record count verification is a data quality control process that confirms record volumes at each stage of extraction, transfer, and loading match expected counts, supporting completeness checks, auditability, and control objectives in enterprise data pipelines and reporting environments.

  • Recurrent Neural Network

    Recurrent neural network is a neural network architecture for modeling sequential data that maintains an internal state over time, enabling enterprises to process and learn from ordered inputs such as text, speech, logs, or time-series signals for analytic and automation use cases.

  • Recurrent Neural Networks

    Recurrent neural networks are neural network architectures for processing sequential or time-dependent data by maintaining a hidden state across timesteps. They matter in enterprises because they enable learning from text, speech, event streams, and time series for forecasting, classification, and anomaly detection.

  • Recyclable Material Index

    Recyclable Material Index is a quantitative measure of the share of a product or component that can enter established recycling processes under defined conditions, used by enterprises for design-for-recycling, regulatory reporting, and sustainability performance management.

  • Recycling Program

    Recycling program is a structured set of policies, processes, and infrastructure that diverts materials from disposal, processes them into secondary raw materials, and supports regulatory compliance, material efficiency, and environmental reporting in enterprise waste and resource management strategies.

  • Red/Blue Cyber Range

    Red/blue cyber range is a controlled training and testing environment in which attacking red teams and defending blue teams conduct live cyber exercises, enabling organizations to validate defenses, refine incident response processes, and build security operations skills under realistic attack conditions.

  • Red Team Evaluation

    Red team evaluation is a structured adversarial security assessment in which independent testers emulate real attackers to test defenses and response capabilities, providing organizations with validated evidence for improving security architecture, operations, and risk management in enterprise environments.

  • Redundancy Architecture

    Redundancy architecture is the planned use of duplicate or alternate IT components and paths to maintain system operation during failures. It matters in enterprise environments because it underpins availability targets, business continuity objectives, and compliance expectations for resilient digital services.

  • Redundancy Testing

    Redundancy testing is a structured process for validating that duplicated systems, components, or data paths correctly assume workload and maintain required services during failures or outages. It matters because it provides evidence that high-availability and continuity designs function as intended in enterprise environments.

  • Redundant Array of Independent Disks

    Redundant array of independent disks (RAID) is a storage method that combines multiple physical drives into logical units to deliver defined levels of redundancy and performance, used in enterprise servers and storage systems to support availability, capacity planning, and data protection strategies.

  • Redundant Path Design

    Redundant path design is an architecture pattern that creates multiple independent network, compute, storage, or facility paths so services continue operating when one path fails, supporting availability targets, business continuity requirements, and resilience objectives in enterprise environments.

  • Redundant Power Feed

    Redundant power feed is an electrical design in which independent power sources and distribution paths supply the same critical load, used in data centers and other facilities to maintain uptime and business continuity when a single power path fails or requires maintenance.

  • Redundant Power Supply

    Redundant power supply is a configuration in which multiple independent power supply units feed the same system so that power delivery continues if one unit or input source fails, supporting availability, uptime targets, and maintenance without shutting down enterprise workloads.