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 283 of 309
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Tool-Augmented Agent
Tool-augmented agent is a software agent that uses an AI model to interpret requests and then call approved tools, APIs, or systems, allowing enterprises to connect models to operational workflows under explicit governance, access control, and observability.
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Tool Calibration
Tool calibration is the process of comparing and, when required, adjusting measurement tools against traceable reference standards so their readings remain within defined tolerances, supporting accurate data, quality control, and regulatory compliance in industrial, laboratory, and enterprise environments.
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Tool Command Language
Tool Command Language (Tcl) is a high-level, interpreted scripting language used for embedding into applications, automation, and GUI development, relevant to enterprises for customizing commercial tools, orchestrating workflows, and integrating heterogeneous systems in operations, networking, and engineering environments.
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Tool Invocation Graph
Tool Invocation Graph is a structured graph representation of how an AI system or software workflow calls and coordinates tools or functions, including their order, dependencies, and data flow, which supports enterprise observability, governance, and control of automated executions.
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Top-of-Rack
Top-of-rack refers to a data center network design in which a switch is installed in each server rack to aggregate server connections and uplink them to higher-tier switches, which helps organize rack-level connectivity and standardize data center operations.
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Top-of-Rack Switch
Top-of-rack switch is a rack-level data center network switch that aggregates server connections within a rack and uplinks them to higher-tier switches, enabling structured, modular rack designs and controlled access-layer connectivity for enterprise and cloud data center networks.
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Topological Qubit
Topological qubit is a proposed type of quantum bit that encodes information in nonlocal topological properties of a physical system, providing intrinsic resistance to certain local errors and informing long-term planning for scalable, fault-tolerant quantum computing architectures in enterprises.
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Topology and Orchestration Specification for Cloud Applications
Topology and Orchestration Specification for Cloud Applications (TOSCA) is an OASIS standard that defines a vendor-neutral language to model, deploy, and manage cloud and network applications, enabling portability and automation across heterogeneous cloud, telecom, and hybrid IT environments.
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Topology Awareness
Topology awareness is the capability of networks and distributed systems to recognize and use the physical or logical arrangement of nodes and links so that routing, placement, and segmentation decisions align with latency, fault domains, and enterprise resilience or performance objectives.
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Topology-Aware Scheduling
Topology-aware scheduling is a workload placement method that uses knowledge of compute, network, and storage topology to position tasks or containers, helping enterprises manage latency, data locality, resilience, and resource utilization across distributed or cloud-native infrastructure.
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Topology Visualization
Topology visualization is the graphical mapping of how components in a network, system, or data platform interconnect and depend on each other, used by enterprises to support analysis, monitoring, troubleshooting, governance, and security across complex hybrid and multicloud environments.
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TOSCA
TOSCA (Topology and Orchestration Specification for Cloud Applications) is an OASIS standard modeling language that describes cloud and network services, their topology, and lifecycle operations in a portable, vendor-neutral way, supporting interoperable orchestration across heterogeneous enterprise and telecom environments.
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Total Cost of Ownership
Total Cost of Ownership is a lifecycle-based financial metric that aggregates all acquisition, implementation, operating, support, and end-of-life costs of an asset or service, enabling enterprises to evaluate technology options, sourcing strategies, and long-term commitments beyond initial purchase price.
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Total Lifecycle Carbon
Total lifecycle carbon is the quantified greenhouse gas emissions of a product, service, or system across all lifecycle stages, from raw material extraction through end-of-life, used by enterprises to evaluate climate performance, procurement choices, and long-term technology planning.
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Towers
Towers are vertical structures that host antennas and radio equipment for wireless communication, providing elevation for signal transmission and reception. Towers matter in enterprise and telecom contexts because they form core access infrastructure for mobile networks, private wireless, backhaul, and broadcast services.
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Trace ID
Trace ID is a unique correlation identifier used in distributed systems to link all telemetry associated with a single request or transaction, which allows enterprises to reconstruct execution paths, troubleshoot issues, and analyze performance across services and infrastructure components.
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Trace Sampling
Trace sampling is a telemetry collection technique that records a subset of distributed traces from applications and services to control observability data volume, enabling performance monitoring, incident investigation, and compliance-aligned data retention in complex, microservices-based or cloud-native enterprise environments.
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Trace Viewer
Trace Viewer is a web-based visualization tool for execution trace data that presents detailed timelines of events, threads, and processes, enabling enterprises to analyze performance characteristics, identify latency sources, and support debugging and observability workflows in complex software and systems.
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Tracing Context
Tracing context is a structured set of identifiers and metadata that links related operations across distributed systems, enabling observability platforms to reconstruct end-to-end execution paths, analyze performance and errors, and support monitoring, troubleshooting, and compliance in enterprise environments.
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Trade Compliance Management
Trade compliance management is the coordinated framework of policies, processes, and systems that ensures an enterprise conducts cross-border trade in accordance with export, import, customs, and sanctions regulations, supporting regulatory adherence and continuity of international supply chain operations.