Now in its fourth edition, Fundamentals of Information Systems has been heavily revised and reorganized, yet continues to offer a concise overview of information systems fundamentals in a short, nine-chapter format. Seasoned authors Ralph Stair and George Reynolds weave the fundamentals of managing information systems into an understandable and engaging text.
Fundamentals of Information Systems is now in its ninth edition and I have learnt from both the previous versions for my college courses. This book is able to encapsulate the necessary knowledge for understanding broad and specific concepts attached to systems. Lot of stuff from this book was also useful in my learning of technology management course that i signed up for. I was especially fond of the ethics chapters and, on looking up, I found that George Reynolds is a author par excellence about ethics.
This book is a survey of information systems, with helpful definitions and examples. However, the discussion of individual systems and technologies don't seem authoritative or perceptive of future trends. I don't think there should be more details necessarily, but the topics are sort of cobbled together without a strong context of how these technologies and systems will change.
If you were to just read the Wikipedia entries on software, business intelligence, and databases, for instance, you'd have a better working definitions of these ideas.
Make sure to buy the latest version of this book, because the terminology and topics covered will quickly become dated.
This book broke down information systems very good. It even described real world instances where you would use certain systems. It was very informative and easy to understand. I would defiantly recommend if you want to learn management tools most likely used in your company. It just breaks down why you would use it not really train how to use specific systems, just to be clear. It explains when and why not how. But still very detailed in how to utilize each system.