Timothy Prickett Morgan
Timothy Prickett Morgan is President of Guild Companies Inc and Editor in Chief of The Four Hundred. He has been keeping a keen eye on the midrange system and server markets for three decades, and was one of the founding editors of The Four Hundred, the industry's first subscription-based monthly newsletter devoted exclusively to the IBM AS/400 minicomputer, established in 1989. He is also currently co-editor and founder of The Next Platform, a publication dedicated to systems and facilities used by supercomputing centers, hyperscalers, cloud builders, and large enterprises. Previously, Prickett Morgan was editor in chief of EnterpriseTech, and he was also the midrange industry analyst for Midrange Computing (now defunct), and its editor for Monday Morning iSeries Update, a weekly IBM midrange newsletter, and for Wednesday Windows Update, a weekly Windows enterprise server newsletter. Prickett Morgan has also performed in-depth market and technical studies on behalf of computer hardware and software vendors that helped them bring their products to the AS/400 market or move them beyond the IBM midrange into the computer market at large. Prickett Morgan was also the editor of Unigram.X, published by British publisher Datamonitor, which licenses IT Jungle's editorial for that newsletter as well as for its ComputerWire daily news feed and for its Computer Business Review monthly magazine. He is currently Principal Analyst, Server Platforms & Architectures, for Datamonitor's research unit, and he regularly does consulting work on behalf of Datamonitor's AskComputerWire consulting services unit. Prickett Morgan began working for ComputerWire as a stringer for Computergram International in 1989. Prickett Morgan has been a contributing editor to many industry magazines over the years, including BusinessWeek Newsletter for Information Executives, Infoperspectives, Business Strategy International, Computer Systems News, IBM System User, Midrange Computing, and Midrange Technology Showcase, among others. Prickett Morgan studied aerospace engineering, American literature, and technical writing at the Pennsylvania State University and has a BA in English. He is not always as serious as his picture might lead you to believe.
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IBM EMEA Gives Killer i License And SWMA After-License Deals
June 10, 2013 Timothy Prickett Morgan
If you are an IBM i shop sitting on a relatively old box that is no longer on maintenance and you want to get back on Software Maintenance while also moving to a new Power7 or Power7+ system, then IBM‘s EMEA region has two deals for you. And if you use them both, you will only spend $2 instead of thousands to possibly many tens of thousands of dollars.
Both of the deals, which were announced on May 30 and then quickly updated on June 5 are part of IBM’s 25-year Power i anniversary celebration, and I also think
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IBM Buys SoftLayer To Build Out Hosting, Cloud Businesses
June 10, 2013 Timothy Prickett Morgan
Big Blue is adamant about building up its cloud business, and has promised Wall Street that it can boost cloud-related services revenues to $7 billion by 2015. IBM was late to the public cloud game, which Amazon Web Services fired up in 2006 after several years of development. Call it something like a decade of a lead. And that is why it has shelled out an undisclosed sum to buy cloud and hosting rival SoftLayer.
While IBM has made great strides with its SmartCloud public cloud, it has many orders of magnitude fewer customers than AWS and a less
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IDC Concurs That The Server Racket Is Rough
June 10, 2013 Timothy Prickett Morgan
If you were hoping that the box counters at IDC would have better news about the server business–or lack thereof on some fronts–in the first quarter after Gartner gave its prognosis, sorry. No can do. While the world is consuming more machinery than it did in past years, the revenues are sliding and it is my guess that profits are sliding even faster across the industry.
And that is not a good thing for the major IT vendors, who are depending on lush and luscious system profits to run their businesses for the long haul instead of for the short
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IBM Rolls Out PureFlex-IBM i Bundle With Decent Discounts
June 10, 2013 Timothy Prickett Morgan
The Edge 2013 conference for IBM customers and partners with a bend toward big data and cloud is under way in Las Vegas this week, but the Power Systems platform running the IBM i is getting some action with a special discounted bundle of hardware, software, and services that will make it less costly and easier for IBM i shops to move to PureFlex modular systems.
I caught wind two weeks ago that there was a special deal coming for IBM i customers running their workloads on Flex System iron, and this turns out to be the case. This deal
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Admin Alert: Renewing A Default *System Certificate
June 5, 2013 Joe Hertvik
In an earlier column, I described how to solve problems when loading digital certificates into your IBM i Digital Certificate Manager (DCM). This week, I’ll review another DCM problem where the default certificate in the system certificate store (*SYSTEM) expires, and the system starts refusing connections from clients that use digital certificates. This week, let’s examine what happens when a *SYSTEM default certificate expires and how to renew that certificate in DCM.
Getting The Terminology Correct
To untangle what’s happening here, let’s first look at some terminology regarding your partition’s DCM.
A system certificate store, designated by *SYSTEM in DCM,
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Conditional SQL I/O
June 5, 2013 Ted Holt
If an RPG programmer has a best friend, it may very well be the CHAIN opcode, which performs a random read on a keyed database file. It’s common programming practice in information-processing shops to read one file sequentially and to chain to read a host of others randomly. SQL handles this sort of thing differently. With SQL, joining is the proper way to retrieve data from two or more tables and/or views. The difference is even more pronounced when some of the random processing may or may not take place.
Suppose you’re responsible for a database that contains customer orders.
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When Is A Source Member Not A Source Member?
June 5, 2013 Susan Gantner
I do my coding using Rational Developer for Power Systems (a.k.a. RDP). Most of the time, I open the source code in the editor in RDP much like SEU users would, in the sense that I open my source directly from a member in a source file in a library on IBM i. When I save from the RDP editor, the source is saved back to that same member.
Below is a picture of what my screen looks like when I’m working with RDP as described above. Note the highlighted library, source files, and members in the “Remote Systems” view
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IBM Rejiggers PowerVM And AIX Prices
June 3, 2013 Timothy Prickett Morgan
Prices on the AIX variant of Unix from IBM and the PowerVM server virtualization hypervisor that is used to slice up Power Systems iron so it can run multiple copies of AIX, IBM i, or Linux have been tweaked.
In announcement letter 313-045, IBM says prices on AIX and PowerVM have been both raised and lowered, depending on the feature and edition. As usual, it is very tough sorting out what the product feature codes mean in these price changes, but I took a whack at it:
The price changes took effect on May 28. The only reason I
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Jack Henry Boosts Profits Lots More Than Sales In Fiscal Q3
June 3, 2013 Timothy Prickett Morgan
Every time the Jack Henry & Associates comes around on the news cycle, it is amazing that no one has tried to acquire the banking software and services provider. It has been on a very long winning streak of pushing up revenues and extracting profits at an even faster rate.
In its third quarter of fiscal 2013 ended in March, Jack Henry boasted sales up 10 percent to $281.5 million. Net income was up 25 percent to just a hair under $46 million, which means the company brought 16.3 percent of sales to the bottom line. That is really not
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The Server Biz Stalls In The First Quarter
June 3, 2013 Timothy Prickett Morgan
The combined effects of server virtualization, cloud computing, a grumpy global economy, transitions in major server processors, and a shift in form factors for certain kinds of workloads have all combined to make first quarter server sales a little less than they might otherwise be. But, it must be remembered, companies still consumed millions of machines and spent billions of dollars on shiny new iron in the three months ending in March.
By the counting and estimating done by the server geeks at Gartner, the world’s companies consumed some 2.33 million machines of all makes, models, shapes, and sizes