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  • Charges Dropped, Rational Open Access Goes Free

    February 6, 2012 Dan Burger

    There’ll be no confetti dropping from the ceiling or champagne corks popping, but IBM‘s announcement that Rational Open Access: RPG Edition becomes available as a free PTF beginning February 14 deserves a little fanfare. Here’s a technology with a lot of promise, the native GUI interface as some call it, that’s finally available without blood, sweat, and tears poured into the ordering process. And, even better, without any licensing charges.

    The PTFs are the short-term solution to getting RPG OA into the hands of those who have complained to IBM for that past two years. By May, RPG OA

    … Read more
  • The Business Analytics Software Biz Is Booming

    January 30, 2012 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    Wherever the IT money is being spent, market researchers like IDC and Gartner have to be there to dice and slice who gets what money and in turn make money on that data. That’s why IDC has just launched a semi-annual tracking service for the data analytics market, and it would not be surprising for it to eventually go quarterly like IDC and Gartner have for servers, storage, PCs, and other IT expenses.

    IDC’s prognosticators reckon that this year the market for business analytics software will grow by 8.9 percent, to $33.9 billion. Of the 12 sub-sectors in the business

    … Read more
  • SAP Stamps Its Mark On 2011

    January 30, 2012 Dan Burger

    When you’re the world’s largest business applications vendor, your financial report card stands as a bellwether for the IT industry. Of course, economic uncertainty adds to the drama and brings an even larger crowd to the stage. Last week, SAP delivered a powerful performance by announcing it beat all expectations for not only the final quarter of 2011, but for the entire year as well.

    SAP may not be the largest IBM i software provider in terms of customer base or revenue stream, but there are several thousand customers, and some of the largest IBM i shops in the world,

    … Read more
  • Take One Tablet And Call Your IT Manager In The Morning

    January 30, 2012 Jenny Thomas

    The explosion of tablets is enough to give even the most savvy IT managers a splitting headache. Almost everyone would agree tablets are cool, and those lucky enough to own one can’t say enough good things about them, but the introduction of tablets into the workplace raises legitimate concerns about security and application access.

    Cisco Systems recently commissioned a global survey of IT managers and executives in a wide variety of global companies of all sectors and sizes to assess attitudes, fears, and hopes for tablets in the workplace. All 1,500 of the respondents were either primary IT decision makers

    … Read more
  • IT Budgets To Crunch This Year In North America And Europe

    January 30, 2012 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    If you were expecting for IT spending to go up this year and for new projects to get going and perhaps get a pay raise, the consensus is building that this is not going to happen. That’s the bad news. The good news would seem to be that instead of being asked to do more with less, IT shops will be asked to do a lot more with a tiny bit more dough. But it’s not that simple, so don’t jump to conclusions.

    IT market researcher Gartner spends a lot of time with CIOs to try to help them figure

    … Read more
  • Reader Feedback On IBM’s Move On Up To Power7 Upgrade Math

    January 30, 2012 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    Hey, TPM:

    Best wishes for 2012!

    In the table in your story, IBM’s Move On Up To Power7 Upgrade Math, taking into account the last supported release that can could run on that model, can you update this with input from this link from IBM: http://www-947.ibm.com/systems/support/i/planning/upgrade/osmapping.html

    Nobody in their right mind will pay software maintenance for machines that cannot run a release that is supported. For example, the iSeries 170 and 250 machines can run V5R3 at the latest, and there is no point (apart from sympathy for IBM, ha!) to pay software support if the right for

    … Read more
  • Anyone For LPAR?

    January 30, 2012 Dan Burger

    Among the IBM i user base, you often hear about the great technology being used by the customers at the enterprise end of the spectrum. Meanwhile, in the small to midsize shops, you hear complaints that the technology is too complex. The functionality could be put to use, but the complexity is prohibitive. Logical partitioning, or LPAR in the IBM mainframe and now Power Systems lingo, is one of the technologies that fits that description.

    You’ll find LPARs being used in just about every large enterprise that depends on the IBM i for core business applications. When you explore the

    … Read more
  • Mad Dog 21/21: Angry Hurd

    January 30, 2012 Hesh Wiener

    Oracle sure has headaches. It is not selling enough software to please investors. It isn’t making its numbers in hardware, either. It is governed by a two-headed executive reporting to CEO Larry Ellison. One of the presidents, Mark Hurd, is trying to get beyond the airing of a lawyer’s demand letter that turned his private folly into public obloquy. As a result, loyal Larry Ellison is saddled with his distracting, maladroit prince when he sorely needs to be fully focused, playing at the top of his game.

    All this unfolded in late December, beginning on the 20th when, after the

    … Read more
  • Fiserv Alleges FIS Infringed On Patents For Online Payment Software

    January 30, 2012 Alex Woodie

    Fiserv this month filed a lawsuit in federal court against rival IBM i banking software provider Fidelity National Information Services (FIS) and its Metavante subsidiary over alleged violation of its patents relating to online payments. The alleged violations involve patents held by Fiserv’s subsidiaries, CheckFree and CashEdge, that describe online financial activities, such as conducting account-to-account transfers, creating electronic transaction “pick lists,” and making payments on behalf of others.

    Fiserv made a big investment in electronic bill and presentment technology in 2007 when it spent $4.4 billion to buy CheckFree, which at the time processed more than 75 percent of

    … Read more
  • IBM Throws The Books At Big Power7 Shops

    January 30, 2012 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    If you are shopping for a big bad box to run IBM i, AIX, or Linux–or a combination of the three–then Big Blue has a deal for you on its enterprise-class Power 770, 780, and 795 servers. The deal that IBM offered to customers of System p5 590, System p5 595 machines in October 2007 and then in March 2010 on the Power 595 in the wake of the initial Power7-based servers, which came out a month earlier.

    In announcement letter 312-011, Big Blue has rolled out the Power Systems 2 For 1 Power 7 Processor Book promotion. If

    … Read more

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