data record is about the Recording of data .. while information is the data which we are about to record
The scope of work and the educational requirements are the difference between data communication and data communication information.
It seems like there is a typo in your question. However, if you meant to ask about the difference between "information" and "data," data refers to raw facts and statistics, while information is processed data that has meaning and context.
The difference between data and information is that one is spelt incorrectly.
The difference between primary data and secondary data is that primary data is the information from the original research.
Information is USEFUL data. Veriler kullanılarak bilgi üretilir.
Data is called raw data or facts. But data with some context is called information, and information becomes knowledge which can be shared.
Information can be defined as meaningful data. Computing can be the process of doing something with the data to produce information.
Type your answer here... contains the data and have only one record format
Data refers to raw facts and figures, information is processed data that has context and meaning, and knowledge is the understanding and application of information.
nothing there the same thing
I would say "raw data" is a collection of observations from experiments and "information" is the conclusion derived from that raw data after it has been analyzed.
I am not sure about the "at least 8" part of the question. The answer to the question the difference between data and information is simple. Information is derived from data. In other words data can be transformed or refined into information. Information can then be again stored as data, such as placing the information into a "DATAbase"...where more information can then be gleaned from it. For example, a temperature reading from a thermometer would be a piece of data. If you recorded the data over and over again you could then find out information from it, like at certain times the temperature rises or falls (depending on what you are measuring).