Alex Woodie
Alex Woodie is Senior Editor at IT Jungle. He was previously editor of two of IT Jungle's main newsletters, Four Hundred Stuff and The Windows Observer. Prior to joining Midrange Server (as Guild Companies was formerly called) in October 2001, Alex was a products editor at now defunct publisher Midrange Computing, where he was first introduced to the AS/400 and covered hardware, software, and services for Midrange Technology SHOWCASE magazine. Before joining Midrange Computing, Alex was a staff writer for The Insurance Journal and a reporter and columnist with The Paradise Post newspaper. Woodie obtained his Bachelors of Arts degree in journalism from Humboldt State University in 1997. Upon graduation, Alex intended to make his way onto a major daily newspaper, but in 1999 he found himself drawn to the high-technology industry, where his background in science and engineering has suited him well. He lives in Northern San Diego County. When he is not writing next week's newsletters, Alex can be found in his favorite chair reading the day's paper, in the kitchen, or at the beach.
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Don’t FLRT with Disaster When it Comes to Applying PTFs
September 23, 2014 Alex Woodie
As an IBM i administrator, one surefire way to ruin your day is to apply the wrong program temporary fix (PTF) fix on your system. If you fail to read the fine print in the PTF cover letter, you might just kiss your finely honed IBM i configuration goodbye. But thanks to a free Web-based product from IBM called the Fix Level Recommendation Tool (FLRT), IBM i admins can now get automated guidance into the best course of action.
FLRT is a Web-based tool that provides cross-platform compatibility information and fix recommendations for a variety of IBM products. The software,
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iSphere: A Free and Functional Plugin for RDi/WDSc
September 23, 2014 Alex Woodie
If you’re an IBM i developer who works in the Rational Developer for i (RDi) or WebSphere Developer Studio Client (WDSc) environments, you may want to check out a plug-in called iSphere. The free and open source software speeds and simplifies a number of common tasks in the Eclipse-based IDE, including searching and editing files, binding directories, and viewing spooled files. User reviews so far have been extremely positive.
RDi and its predecessor, WDSc, are the go-to tools for RPG and COBOL programmers working on the IBM i platform. If you’re doing native development on the platform–i.e. not Java, PHP,
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There’s No i in Infor Xi
September 23, 2014 Alex Woodie
Infor used its annual user conference last week to unveil Xi, a new cloud-based platform designed to provide a common technological underpinning for advancing its collection of enterprise applications, specifically in the areas of mobility, cloud computing, and big data analytics. Infor says that none of its IBM i applications will run directly on the Xi platform, but they may benefit in a tangential manner.
The introduction of Infor Xi was the big news at last week’s Inforum 2014 show in New Orleans, Louisiana. Infor Xi is a follow-on to the 10x initiative that Infor unveiled a year ago at
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EXTOL Bolsters B2B Tool for Complex Trading Environments
September 23, 2014 Alex Woodie
When you work in a complex supply chain, maintaining data and application integration points among multiple parties can be challenging. Make a change to one system, and it can have unforeseen impacts down the line. This is the sort of situation that EXTOL is looking to alleviate with the addition of “intelligent developer” features in the latest release of EXTOL Business Integrator (EBI).
EBI is EXTOL’s flagship EDI and enterprise integration broker software for IBM i, Windows, and Linux. The Java-based suite delivers standard X12 and EDIFACT EDI functionality, but goes beyond that by adding next-gen AS2, FTP/S, and SMTP
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MPG Discounts VIOS Tracker for PerfNav Customers
September 23, 2014 Alex Woodie
Midrange Performance Group (MPG) has put together a superset of its performance management tools for IBM Power Systems environments. Navigator MAX bundles the Performance Navigator for IBM i and Power Navigator for AIX, Linux, and VIOS environments.
MPG has been helping IBM i shops get the most out of their hardware investments since the days of the AS/400. The company’s Performance Navigator (“PerfNav”) offering is known as the go-to product for resellers and large shops embarking upon capacity planning and server-sizing exercises. When IBM joined the i5/OS and AIX worlds under the Power Systems umbrella, the Boulder, Colorado, company unveiled
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Bytware’s Messenger Syncs Up Monitoring
September 23, 2014 Alex Woodie
Bytware is shipping version 8.1 of its message management products, MessengerConsole and MessengerPlus. The new release is aimed at ensuring that the various monitoring jobs and schedules are kept in sync across complex environments.
The Messenger products automate IBM i operations by continuously monitoring message queues, logs, and journals for critical messages that could indicate failed jobs or backups, security breaches, printer or network errors, or problems with a high availability product.
With version 8.1, Bytware says that MessengerConsole can now target “a specific system or systems for monitor synchronization.” This ensures that monitors can be sent to specific servers
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Interactive Reporting Gets a Boost at mrc
September 23, 2014 Alex Woodie
One of the most common uses of mrc‘s m-Power development tool is creating Web-based business intelligence and reporting applications. With a recent enhancement, mrc is giving users even more options for interactive reporting.
Interactive reporting is one of a number of pre-built templates that m-Power users can use when they buy a subscription to the tool. The templates provide out-of-the-box capabilities for building interactive reporting applications that run on IBM i and other Java-enabled platforms.
Chicago-based mrc made three main improvements to template. The first gives users the capability to modify row dimensions. With static reports, users can’t change
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Liaison Gets MAD About Token Collisions
September 23, 2014 Alex Woodie
Liaison Technologies last week announced it’s been granted a US patent for its Multiple Active Domains (MAD) tokenization technology, which eliminates the risk of the same token being generated for different values, or what’s known as a token collision.
While it may sound somewhat whimsical, a token collision is no laughing matter. Token collisions can occur in large, geographically distributed organizations that have multiple data centers. When the same surrogate value, or token, is generated for different pieces of real data, a token collision has occurred, and the integrity of the data is lost.
Liaison developed MAD to enable tokens
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Oracle Teams with Secure-24 for JD Edwards Hosting
September 23, 2014 Alex Woodie
Oracle last week announced a partnership with the managed service provider (MSP) Secure-24 that will enable its ERP, CRM, and BI customers to leverage the MSP’s hosting services.
The new service, dubbed Secure-24 Cloud Advantage for Oracle, uses the Virtual Compute Appliance (VCA), which Oracle says is a “wire once, software-defined converged infrastructure system” that can run Windows, Linux, or Solaris.
Secure-24 has installed Oracle VCAs into two data centers, which form the backbone for the Secure-24 Cloud Advantage for Oracle service. The offering blends managed hosting and disaster recovery services into a single offering. Oracle says the service is
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Don’t FLRT with Disaster When it Comes to Applying PTFs
September 23, 2014 Alex Woodie
As an IBM i administrator, one surefire way to ruin your day is to apply the wrong program temporary fix (PTF) fix on your system. If you fail to read the fine print in the PTF cover letter, you might just kiss your finely honed IBM i configuration goodbye. But thanks to a free Web-based product from IBM called the Fix Level Recommendation Tool (FLRT), IBM i admins can now get automated guidance into the best course of action.
FLRT is a Web-based tool that provides cross-platform compatibility information and fix recommendations for a variety of IBM products. The software,