(storage): a building or structure for storage such as aircraft hangers, garages, warehouses, storage buildings, and freight depots
A building used to receive and store goods and merchandise In terms of classifying such property, warehouses are normally located in an area zoned for either commercial or industrial property
A warehouse is a large building where raw materials or manufactured goods are stored until they are exported to other countries or distributed to shops to be sold. a large building for storing large quantities of goods (ware ( -WARE) + house)
The Library Warehouse is used to house less frequently used material and the Macmillan Brown archives Request items from the Warehouse by filling in a "Warehouse request" card at any library
Premises designed and built or converted for the purpose of bulk storage of raw materials or finished or partly finished goods, pending either onward transit or division into smaller batches and subsequent distribution
Premises designed and built for the purpose of bulk storage of raw materials or finished or partly finished goods, pending either onward transit or division into smaller batches and subsequent distribution Willing seller-willing buyer An assumption sometimes made for valuation purposes that the owner of the property concerned is willing to dispose of his interest therein and that there is at least one genuine purchaser in the market for that interest, whether or not such is actually the case at the date of valuation Written-down value At a given time, the result of making one or more annual of periodic deductions for depreciation against capital cost or worth
A warehouse club is a large shop which sells goods at reduced prices to people who pay each year to become members of the organization that runs the shop
(Ticaret) (WMS) An integrated set of system functions designed to manage the locating, putaway, movement, picking and cycle count/inventory verification activities of a warehouse or distribution center. It normally receives purchase, sales and interplant order data from a base ERP system that serve as the authorization to initiate activities. Warehouse locations are described in terms of their weight and volume capacities to enable proper direction when moving or stocking material. Inventory and order status data, collected in real time often through the use of data collection devices, is normally uploaded to the base ERP system on a batch basis
(Ticaret) A physically or logically segregated area within a warehouse defined by the type of material it contains (bulk or rack storage, hazardous material, etc.) or the division of equipment and personnel used to putaway, move and pick
A privately owned warehouse which is licensed by the Customs Authorities in which goods subject to the control of Customs may be stored without the payment of duties The owners of the warehouse must normally give a bond to Customs for the duty on the goods held in the store, hence the common name, BOND See also FREE STORE
The U S Customs Service authorizes bonded warehouses for storage or manufacture of goods on which payment of duties is deferred until the goods enter the Customs Territory The goods are not subject to duties if reshipped to foreign points » Back to top of screen
Place owned by persons approved of by the Secretary of the Treasury, and who have given guarantees or bonds for the strict observance of revenue laws Such warehouses are used for the storage and custody of import merchandise, subject to duty, until the duties are paid or the goods reshipped without entry
A privately owned warehouse which is licenced by the Customs Authorities in which goods subject to the control of Customs may be stored without the payment of duties The owners of the warehouse must normally give a bond to Customs for the duty on the goods held in the store, hence the common name, BOND The Muecke Group of Companies operate bonded stores in South Australia - email: warehouse@muecke com au See also FREE STORE
A Bonded Warehouse is a secure store where maturing whisky is stored It is cool and earth-floored to provide an even temperature and humidity During its period in bond, a cask will lose about 2% of alcohol per year - the so-called "angel's share" With each warehouse holding many hundreds of casks and each cask holding up to 500 litres of whisky, it can be seen how much of an investment is tied up in one of these warehouses No excise duty has yet been levied on this whisky Once the whisky is removed from the warehouse, duty becomes payable
A buliding authorized by Customs authorities for storage of goods on which payment of duties is deferred unitl the goods are removed There are different types of bonded warehouses, depending on the use desired by the owner or lessee
Warehouse owned by persons approved by the Treasury Department (in the U S ), and under bond (=guarantee) for the strict observance of the revenue laws Utilized for storing goods until duties are paid or goods are otherwise properly released
A warehouse in which goods subject to excise taxes or customs duties are temporarily stored without the taxes or duties being assessed A bond or security is given for the payment of all taxes and duties that may eventually become due Operations in the warehouse may include assembly, manipulation or storage but usually not manufacturing
Warehouse owned by persons approved by the Treasury Department, an under bond or guarantee for the strict observance of the revenue laws; utilized for storing goods until duties are paid or goods are otherwise properly released
A warehouse owned by persons approved by the Treasury Department and under bond for the observance of the revenue laws; used for storing goods until duties are paid or goods are released
A collection of integrated subject-oriented databases designed to support the decision support systems function, where each unit of data is relevant to some moment in time
A single system (or database) that accepts information from multiple systems for the purpose of reporting A data warehouse is not currently planned for the e*mpac Project
Data mining and data warehousing go hand in hand Before you can effectively mine information, you have to put it all in one place - at least temporarily Data warehousing involves integrating information from different systems, functions, and locations across an enterprise into a central database to allow more accurate analysis of customer needs, buying patterns, and profitability and improved decision making and marketing
A data collection -- prepackaged or summarized according to specific business rules and designed to support management decision making Data warehouses contain a wide variety of data that present a coherent picture of business information
Subject-oriented, integrated, time-variant, non-volatile store of data collected from other systems that becomes the foundation for decision support and data analysis
This vast database stores information like a data repository but goes a step further, allowing users to access data to perform research-oriented analyses
A database containing copious amounts of information, organized to aid decision-making in an organization Data warehouses receive batch updates, and are configured for fast online queries to produce succinct summaries of data
An integrated, subject oriented collection of data which captures data at incremental moments of time and retains them for a long period of time Data warehouses are usually designed to enhance decision support functions Architected data warehouses contain a single atomic level and multiple secondary levels of data to support particular decision support functions
(noun, database) A collection of integrated subject-oriented Databases designed to support the DSS function, where each unit of data is relevant to some moment in time The data warehouse contains atomic data and lightly summarized data
An integration of multiple, large databases and other information sources into a single repository or access point that is suitable for direct querying, analysis, or processing
A database, frequently very large, that can access all of a company's information While the warehouse can be distributed over several computers and may contain several databases and information from numerous sources in a variety of formats, it should be accessible through a server Thus, access to the warehouse is transparent to the user, who can use simple commands to retrieve and analyze all the information The data warehouse also contains data about how the warehouse is organized, where the information can be found, and any connections between data Frequently used for decision support within an organization, the data warehouse also allows the organization to organize its data, coordinate updates, and see relationships between information gathered from different parts of the organization
According to William Inmon, widely considered the father of the modern data warehouse, a Data Warehouse is a "Subject-Oriented, Integrated, Time-Variant, Nonvolatile collection of data in support of decision making" Data Warehouses tend to have these distinguishing features: (1) Use a subject oriented dimensional data model; (2) Contain publishable data from potentially multiple sources and; (3) Contain integrated reporting tools
A data warehouse brings together data from multiple transactional systems and enables users to access and analyze the information at various levels throughout an enterprise
An implementation of an informational database used to store sharable data sourced from an operational database-of-record It is typically a subject database that allows users to tap into a company's vast store of operational data to track and respond to business trends and facilitate forecasting and planning efforts
Software and hardware to support a massive relational database management system (RDBMS) with multiple indices that allow users of a DSS/EIS to quickly perform longitudinal studies of extensive amounts of Medicaid or other stored public assistance data Common RDBMS technologies include Oracle 8, Sybase Adaptive Server Enterprise, and Sybase Adaptive Server IQ
Multiple databases used to store sharable read?only data that is updated from an operational database-of-record Allows users to tap an organization's data store to track and respond to business trends and facilitate forecasting and planning efforts
A separate database dedicated to decision support Data is transferred from transaction processing systems and integrated It is accessed to provide management information through report writers, query tools, data access and retrieval tools, OLAP servers and enterprise information systems It is a software architecture, not a product
A large database designed to streamline analysis (rather than to streamline transaction processing) It consists of cleansed (ideally) data and metadata (data about the data)
A collection of software and data organized to collect, cleanse, transform and store data from a variety of sources, and analyze and present information to support decision-making, tactical and strategic business processes
Integrates separate databases within a health care system for the interchange of data and reports to allow the management information system (MIS) system to handle data from several sources as if from one source (See Clinical Data Repository)
Holding a mortgage until the market for its resale improves; a fee may be charged to a borrower to offset a lender's mortgage costs Warehousing occurs during tight money markets when discount rates charged by lenders exceed their profit margin, forcing them to hold mortgages until rates drop
The packaging together of many mortgages for the purpose of selling them in the secondary market usually by a mortgage banker who has originated the loans
The short-term borrowing of funds by a mortgage banker using permanent mortgage loans as collateral This form of interim financing is used until the mortgages are sold to a permanent investor
The borrowing of funds by a mortgage banker on a short-term basis at a commercial bank using permanent mortgage loans as collateral This form of interim financing is used until the mortgages are sold to a permanent investor
the performance of those physical and administrative functions incidental to and required in the conduct of the storage activity, i e receipt, sorting, identification, inspection, preservation, putting away, safekeeping, retrieval for issue and preparation for shipment of materiel
Mortgage bankers and other financial institutions make loans that are then periodically sold on the secondary market After the loan is made - but before it is sold - the loan is said to be in the lenders warehouse
A term used in financing to describe the process which loan correspondents employ, assembling into one package a number of mortgage loans which the correspondent has originated and selling them in the secondary mortgage market
Short-term borrowing of funds by mortgage bankers using permanent mortgage loans as collateral The money borrowed is used to make additional mortgage loans This interim financing is used until the mortgages are sold to a permanent investor
The process by which a mortgage banker or mortgage broker assembles mortgages that he or she has made and prepares the mortgages to be sold in the secondary mortgage market By selling these mortgages the originator now has additional capital that can be used to make more mortgages which in turn may be sold in the secondary mortgage market
Mortgage bankers and other financial institutions make loans that are then periodically sold on the secondary market After the loan is made but before it is sold - the loan is said to be in the lenders warehouse
Warehousing is the act or process of storing large quantities of goods so that they can be sold or used at a later date. All donations go towards the cost of warehousing. the business or practice of storing large quantities of goods, especially in warehouses
Warehousing is the assembly of mortgage loans into "pools " Securities that represent shares in these pools are then sold to investors Examples of warehousing "agencies" include Fannie Mae/Federal National Mortgage Association and Ginnie Mae/Government National Mortgage Association
The borrowing of funds by a mortgage banker on a short-term basis using permanent mortgage loans as collateral This form of interim financing provides capital for the mortgage banker to use to fund additional loans until the mortgages can be sold to a permanent investor