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The Architecture Segment is the logical and physical layers of the logical and physical architectures that support the company’s business processes.
  The Business Segment is the layout of a company’s business and support functions and the capabilities of the business that realize those functions.
  The Change Segment attempts to categorize the concepts that lay at the heart of change within an organization.
  A company’s business strategy indirectly describes the difference between the current direction of a company, and the desired direction.  The Change Management Segment describes the changes that must take place in order to close the difference.
  The Compliance Segment defines items that serve as additional dimensions of definition that cut cross many different items within the Enterprise Architecture.
  The Finance Segment encompasses both the revenue gained and the moneys consumed by the conduct of the business.
  The Information Segment is the data a company uses to conduct its business and the relationships that exist between the various data entities and, ultimately, systems of record.
  The Operations Segment details the set of products (software/hardware) that enable the successful delivery of business activities.
  The Solution Segment is the amalgamation of solutions employed in order to successfully execute the company’s activities in accordance with specified requirements.
  The Business Strategy Segment defines the direction that a company intends on taking to increase its overall viability.
  The Workflow Segment is the combinations of business processes and their accompanying activities that enable features and deliver on functions.

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A dynamic view is a description of architectural elements "in action."  It describes how subsets of the multiple architectural elements collaborate to generate the appropriate response to a request. The logical architecture delivers the design in such a way that it models what actually is required, without taking ‘real life’ constraints into account. It is the ideal world design that fully reflects the business requirements. The physical architecture addresses the ‘with what’ aspects of the architectural design. It translates the logical design into buyable products and solutions that can be implemented. The physical design reflects what can be achieved at a certain point. A logical layer is a grouping of similarly designed or purposed applications, components, or services in the logical architecture. Full details available in the Workflow segment. Full details available in the Solution segment. Full details available in the Operations segment.

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