Sentences with phrase «centralised database»

A centralized database refers to a location where information is stored in one single place. It is like a big storage unit that holds all the data in a single location, making it easy to access and manage. Full definition
Much of this is on centralised databases, accessible to a wide range of employees, and information may be widely shared among a number of different organisations.
Eclipse will implement its out - of - the - box Proclaim Case Management Software solution at Williams & Co, providing fee earners with a streamlined client inception process and a powerful centralised database, enabling the firm to maximise its matter management efficiencies.
But here's the ugly truth, Google only beat the Open Source «free the source code» drum when it serves their purposes of getting as many client devices dependent upon and monopolised by their central, highly proprietary, CLOSED, centralised database driven services as possible.
It would certainly not be in the centralised database.
More important, large companies are heavily departmentalised, in spite of having centralised databases.
The hacker would have had to gain access to the private files of the CEO or the VP of Finance to obtain this material — a job requiring as much time to implement as a hack of the centralised database.
Last year, Brazil launched a centralised database to monitor individual trees through the supply chain to help combat illegal logging in the Amazon.
Temperature records from the colonial period in particular were recorded in a variety of ways, such as in logbooks, almanacs or newspapers, rather than in a centralised database.
The UK for example unveiled Gov.UK Verify in September 2014, a proposed public services identity assurance programme which might use a network of trusted and vetted third party providers instead of relying on a centralised database.
The vaccine trial involved scheduled contact visits at 30 — 37 weeks» gestation and at 1, 2 and 7 months postpartum, during which self - reported data on maternal and household smoking behaviours (potential confounding factors) were routinely collected by a trained research assistant and entered into a centralised database.
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