6. System Specification
The user has agreed to the project through signing off the user requirement specification
The developers know what to do through the design specification,
Now the next document, called the 'system specification' describes *how* it is to be carried out.
Technical details typically include:
Software applications to be used | These could be off-the-shelf applications modified to suit the project or they may be bespoke applications already available within the company |
Storage requirements | This includes local storage requirements such as hard disk size or it may be networked storage such as file servers |
System memory | How much RAM will be required by the system in order for it to run effectively |
Input devices needed | These include OMR devices, scanners, barcode readers, keyboards, mice, touch screens etc |
Output devices to be used | These could be printers, plotters, monitors and so on. |
Computing/ processing power needed | For a huge system it may need a mainframe level of computing power, on the other hand it may only need a standard personal computer to run |
Security and Backup systems | How the passwords are handled and controlled, authentication methods, how backups are to be handled and so on. |
People required | The system may need a full time network manager and a team of support technicians for example |
Buildings and offices required | The system may need a dedicated data room or even an external data centre. |
Network configuration | If it is a networked system then this includes topology, servers, router, hubs to be used |
System feeds | Many systems are inter-linked. For instance an accounting system may be connected to the production system to keep track of products being made and sold. |
The overall purpose of the system specification documentation is to lay down exactly how the system is made up.
challenge see if you can find out one extra fact on this topic that we haven't already told you
Click on this link: System Specification