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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 289 of 309

  • Unified Data Center Fabric

    Unified data center fabric is a converged data center network architecture that carries Ethernet, storage, and application traffic over a single, policy-driven fabric. It matters because it consolidates separate networks, supports virtualization and cloud platforms, and simplifies operation and scaling of data center infrastructure.

  • Unified Data Fabric

    Unified data fabric is an architectural approach that provides a virtualised, policy-driven layer over distributed, heterogeneous data sources, enabling consistent access, governance, and control for analytics, AI, and applications across on-premises and cloud environments in complex enterprise data estates.

  • Unified Data Management

    Unified data management is an approach that coordinates integration, governance, security, and access for data across heterogeneous systems and environments. It matters in enterprises because it supports consistent policies, metadata, and controls for analytics, compliance, and cross-domain data sharing.

  • Unified Data Plane

    Unified data plane is an architectural layer that centralizes and standardizes data access, policy enforcement, and connectivity across heterogeneous data platforms, clouds, and locations, enabling uniform governance, observability, and control for enterprise data movement and usage.

  • Unified Digital Policy Framework

    Unified digital policy framework is an enterprise-wide construct that standardizes how policies for security, data usage, identity, and compliance are defined, governed, and enforced, enabling consistent, auditable controls across heterogeneous systems, cloud and on-premises environments, and organizational teams.

  • Unified Edge Fabric

    Unified edge fabric is a networking and security architecture pattern that creates a single, consistent fabric across campuses, branches, data centers, 5G, and cloud edges, allowing enterprises to apply uniform connectivity, segmentation, and policy control to distributed locations.

  • Unified Fabric

    Unified fabric is a converged data center networking model that carries LAN, SAN, and other traffic types over a single Ethernet-based infrastructure, which matters to enterprises seeking cabling simplification, consolidated management, and consistent policy enforcement across storage and data networks.

  • Unified Fabric Controller

    Unified fabric controller is a centralized management and control system for converged data center network fabrics that carry storage and IP traffic, used by enterprises to standardize configuration, enforce policies, and monitor performance across shared Ethernet-based infrastructure.

  • Unified Fault Management

    Unified fault management is an approach to network and IT operations that consolidates detection, correlation, and handling of faults across multi-vendor and multi-domain environments into one framework, supporting centralized visibility, consistent policies, and integration with broader service assurance and IT service management processes.

  • Unified Hybrid Scheduler

    Unified hybrid scheduler is not an established or formally defined term in current high-credibility technical or enterprise literature, and available sources instead describe hybrid or unified scheduling capabilities under existing categories such as workload automation, cluster scheduling, or hybrid cloud management.

  • Unified Interconnect Fabric

    Unified interconnect fabric is a converged data center networking architecture that carries storage, compute, and management traffic over one shared physical fabric, helping enterprises reduce parallel LAN and SAN infrastructures while maintaining traffic separation, performance controls, and centralized operations management.

  • Unified Interconnect Framework

    Unified Interconnect Framework is a term used inconsistently across technical and marketing contexts, without a single standardized definition, so enterprises must interpret it based on the specific architecture, interconnect technology stack, or vendor approach described in the surrounding documentation.

  • Unified Knowledge Fabric

    Unified knowledge fabric is an architectural construct that links and governs heterogeneous knowledge assets across systems through shared semantic models, enabling consistent discovery, reasoning, and reuse of enterprise knowledge for analytics, AI workloads, governance, and decision-support use cases.

  • Unified Memory Access

    Unified memory access is a memory architecture in which CPUs, GPUs, and other accelerators share a single logical address space, which matters in enterprise computing because it simplifies heterogeneous workload development and affects performance, capacity planning, and security policies.

  • Unified Metadata Fabric

    Unified metadata fabric is an architectural layer that connects, standardizes, and governs metadata across multiple data platforms and tools, enabling consistent policies, lineage, and discovery for analytics, AI, and compliance in complex enterprise data environments.

  • Unified Modeling Language

    Unified Modeling Language (UML) is a standardized visual modeling language for describing the structure and behavior of software-intensive systems. It matters in enterprise contexts because it supports consistent architecture documentation, model-driven development, stakeholder communication, and governance across complex application and integration landscapes.

  • Unified Network Fabric

    Unified network fabric is an integrated networking architecture that converges multiple traffic types and domains onto a single, policy-managed fabric, enabling consistent connectivity, segmentation, and operations across data center, campus, and hybrid cloud environments for enterprise workloads and services.

  • Unified Observability

    Unified observability is an approach that combines telemetry collection, analytics, and visualization across applications, infrastructure, networks, and user experience into a single correlated view, enabling enterprises to monitor reliability, troubleshoot incidents, and align operations with defined service-level and governance objectives.

  • Unified Observability Fabric

    Unified observability fabric is an architectural and data layer that centralizes, normalizes, and routes telemetry from heterogeneous systems into a single observability plane, supporting cross-domain monitoring, troubleshooting, security analytics, and governance for complex enterprise, hybrid, and multi-cloud environments.

  • Unified Orchestration Plane

    Unified Orchestration Plane is a centralized control and management layer that coordinates policies, automation, and workflows across diverse infrastructure, network, data, or application domains, allowing enterprises to apply consistent orchestration, governance, and lifecycle management over distributed and heterogeneous technology environments.