Skip to main content

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 235 of 309

  • Retention Policy

    Retention policy is a formally defined rule set that governs how long an enterprise retains, archives, and disposes of data or records, ensuring alignment with legal, regulatory, governance, and business requirements while supporting storage management, risk reduction, and e-discovery activities.

  • Reticle Limit

    Reticle limit is the maximum lithographic exposure field that a reticle and stepper or scanner can project onto a wafer in one shot, which constrains die size, reticle layout, and cost and yield considerations in semiconductor manufacturing.

  • Retraining Trigger Mechanism

    Retraining trigger mechanism is a defined process or condition set that initiates retraining of a machine learning or AI model when monitored performance, data characteristics, or risk thresholds deviate from specified limits, supporting governed, auditable model lifecycle management in enterprise environments.

  • Retrieval Augmented Generation

    Retrieval augmented generation is an enterprise approach to generative AI that adds a retrieval layer over indexed corporate or domain data, so language models answer queries using current, governed information while keeping knowledge in external storage rather than model weights.

  • Return Air Temperature

    Return air temperature is the measured temperature of air returning from occupied or conditioned spaces to an HVAC system for recooling, reheating, or filtration. It matters in enterprise environments because it informs load calculations, controls, energy use, and environmental compliance.

  • Reuse and Repurpose Program

    Reuse and Repurpose Program is an enterprise initiative that governs how organizations systematically redeploy existing hardware, software, data, or content assets for new or extended uses, to optimize resource utilization, control costs, and support sustainability and compliance objectives.

  • Reverse Logistics

    Reverse logistics is the set of supply chain processes that route products and materials from customers or downstream partners back to the enterprise for return, repair, reuse, recycling, or disposal, supporting cost control, compliance, and sustainability objectives in enterprise operations.

  • Reward Optimization Framework

    Reward optimization framework is a formal methodology and tooling layer that defines and manages reward functions for machine learning and reinforcement learning systems, enabling enterprises to encode objectives, constraints, and trade-offs into automated decisions while supporting governance, auditability, and controlled behavioral tuning.

  • RF Interconnect

    RF interconnect is the system of cables, connectors, and transmission structures that carry radio-frequency signals between components, while preserving controlled impedance and low loss. It matters in enterprise wireless, RF test, and infrastructure deployments where signal integrity and regulatory compliance are required.

  • RF Spectrum Analyzer

    RF spectrum analyzer is an electronic test instrument that measures the amplitude of radio frequency signals versus frequency. It matters in enterprise environments for validating wireless systems, managing interference, and supporting regulatory compliance for transmitters and spectrum use.

  • Right to be Forgotten

    Right to be Forgotten is a legal and technical data protection concept that grants individuals, under defined conditions, the ability to request deletion or de-indexing of their personal data. It matters to enterprises because it affects data governance, architecture, and regulatory compliance obligations.

  • Right to Erasure

    Right to erasure is a data protection right that allows individuals, under defined legal conditions, to request deletion of personal data. It matters for enterprises because it affects system design, data governance, regulatory compliance, and risk management across digital and physical environments.

  • Right to Erasure Workflow

    Right to Erasure Workflow is a structured enterprise process for receiving, verifying, executing, and documenting data deletion requests under privacy laws such as GDPR, enabling organizations to coordinate lawful erasure across systems, manage exceptions, and demonstrate compliance to regulators and auditors.

  • Ring-Learning With Errors

    Ring-Learning With Errors is a lattice-based cryptographic hardness assumption over polynomial rings that underlies several post-quantum encryption, key encapsulation, and signature schemes, and it matters to enterprises evaluating quantum-resistant public-key primitives for protocols, products, and long-term data protection strategies.

  • Ring Resonator

    Ring resonator is a resonant structure in which electromagnetic waves circulate in a closed-loop waveguide and couple to adjacent waveguides at discrete resonant frequencies, used in integrated photonics, networking equipment, and sensing devices in enterprise and data center environments.

  • RISC

    RISC (reduced instruction set computer) is a processor architecture that uses a streamlined, fixed-length instruction set and load-store design to support efficient pipelining and instruction throughput, which enterprises apply across servers, networking, mobile, and embedded systems for power-efficient, predictable compute platforms.

  • RISC-V Accelerator Core

    RISC-V accelerator core is a hardware processing core that implements the open RISC-V instruction set and extends it with custom or domain-specific capabilities to offload specialized workloads in heterogeneous systems, supporting targeted performance, power, and security objectives for enterprise deployments.

  • Risk Acceptance

    Risk acceptance is a documented risk treatment decision in which an organization intentionally retains a known risk within its defined risk appetite and tolerance, typically after analysis shows that additional controls are not justified by cost, feasibility, or expected benefit.

  • Risk Acceptance Criteria

    Risk acceptance criteria are documented thresholds and conditions that define which risks an enterprise will accept without additional treatment. The concept matters because it standardizes risk decisions, supports governance and compliance, and aligns residual risk with organizational objectives and obligations.

  • Risk-Adaptive Access Control

    Risk-adaptive access control is an access control model that evaluates contextual and behavioral risk signals to adjust access decisions in real time. It matters for enterprises that need conditional, policy-based control over access to applications, cloud services, and sensitive data.