
NIST Enterprise Architecture Model - Wikipedia
The NIST Enterprise Architecture Model is a five-layered model for enterprise architecture, designed for organizing, planning, and building an integrated set of information and …
enterprise architecture (EA) - Glossary | CSRC
A strategic information asset base that defines the mission, the information necessary to perform the mission, the technologies necessary for performing the mission, and the transitional …
Enterprise architecture framework - Wikipedia
An enterprise architecture framework (EA framework) defines how to create and use an enterprise architecture. An architecture framework provides principles and practices for creating and …
NIST Enterprise Architecture Model (NIST EA Model) - CIO Wiki
2022年12月28日 · The NIST EA Model provides a framework for organizing and defining the components of an enterprise architecture, and for understanding how those components fit …
EA - Glossary | CSRC
The description of an enterprise’s entire set of information systems: how they are configured, how they are integrated, how they interface to the external environment at the enterprise’s …
NIST EA Model (Rigdon 1989, p.138) - ResearchGate
NIST EA model organizes an architectural description into five different architecture levels: business unit, information, information system, data, and delivery system. The NIST EA model …
PM-7: Enterprise Architecture - csf.tools
Develop and maintain an enterprise architecture with consideration for information security, privacy, and the resulting risk to organizational operations and assets, individuals, other …
企业架构研究总结(6)——联邦企业架构之FEAF的出现和构成( …
2013年5月3日 · CIO委员会自1998年4月启动了FEAF的开发,通过借鉴NIST企业架构模型、Zachman框架以及企业架构规划(EAP,Enterprise Architecture Planning)等技术,最终 …
The Formation and Evolution of Enterprise Architecture (1960 …
2024年8月23日 · Enterprise Architecture (EA) is a comprehensive framework used to manage and align an organization’s IT assets, people, operations, and projects with its...
The term “Enterprise Architecture” was first consistently used by Rigdon (1989) for describing the NIST EA model, although also without any specific definition of its meaning.