• The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
Menu
  • The Four Hundred
  • Subscribe
  • Media Kit
  • Contributors
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • IBM Extends Dynamic Capacity Pricing Scheme To Its Cloud

    February 24, 2021 Alex Woodie

    What if you could buy computer processing credits from a systems vendor and use the credits to run workloads on your on-premise server or in the vendor’s cloud? Better yet, what if the vendor was IBM and the workloads were IBM i applications? Because that is essentially the hybrid computing pricing structure that IBM unveiled yesterday as part of its latest Power Systems announcements.

    The new hybrid pricing option is an extension of the so-called Dynamic Capacity pricing scheme that IBM unveiled through its Power Private Cloud offering, which IBM launched in May 2020. As part of that offering, …

    Read more
  • Tech Data’s Take On Certified Pre-Owned IT Gear

    February 22, 2021 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    It may be ironic, but even the largest sellers of new datacenter equipment in the world sometimes have to – and eagerly want to – sell used IT equipment. And if they are smart – and the executives at Tech Data certainly are on behalf of their downstream reseller and end user customers – they stick to certified pre-owned equipment with the backing of the original equipment manufacturers.

    When Tech Data was founded in Clearwater, Florida by Edward Raymond in 1974, the company sold various peripherals and supplies for minicomputer and mainframe systems. The company branched out into PC distribution …

    Read more
  • IBM i on Google Cloud Appears To Be Stuck in Alpha

    February 17, 2021 Alex Woodie

    Companies that want to run IBM i workloads in Google Cloud will have to wait a bit longer, as the public cloud service is still in limited alpha, with no signs that it will become generally available any time soon.

    It has been close to three years since we first broke the news about the partnership between IBM and Google Cloud. At the inaugural POWERUp conference in San Antonio, Texas, in May 2018, IBM i chief architect Steve Will publicly discussed plans the two companies had made to run IBM i and AIX instances on the Power Systems servers …

    Read more
  • Power Systems Security: More Than The Sum Of Its Parts

    February 17, 2021 Tony Perera

    The IBM i platform is no longer an island unto itself. In many companies, there is a diversity of different systems — Unix systems, Linux servers, and Windows environments, not to mention IBM i. Each of these environments brings its own strength and weakness. The goal is to not let these differences hurt something that’s important to you: security.

    Make no mistake: It’s a good thing that Power Systems servers can run multiple operating systems. From an IBM i perspective, it ensures more R&D dollars from IBM to support the hardware. It seems doubtful IBM would spend billions to develop …

    Read more
  • Big Blue Rolls Out Red Hat Power Stack

    February 15, 2021 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    A few weeks ago, we told you about some of the announcements that Big Blue was packaging up for Power Systems hardware and separately for the combination of its Red Hat systems software stack and Power Systems iron for on premises datacenters. These announcements are slated to go out on February 23, as far as we know, but the IBM Announcement Letter system often has other ideas and sometimes even violates the company’s own embargoes, as if it has a mind of its own.

    (For all we know, something that old and so full of data does have a mind …

    Read more
  • IBM Readies Power Systems Announcements For February 23

    February 1, 2021 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    The word on the street is that IBM is getting ready to do a slew of announcements relating to its Power Systems platform at the end of this month, specifically on February 23. Generally speaking, the announcements are going to focus on IT infrastructure modernization, cloud computing, and application modernization, which are obviously things that a lot of the IBM i base in particular has to consider here in 2021.

    As best as we can figure, IBM is going to tell business partners in the Power Systems channel a bit about what is happening on February 9, two weeks before …

    Read more
  • Sometimes Folks Only Learn The Hard Way About Keeping Software Current

    February 1, 2021 Rob McNelly

    School’s been out for me for a very long time, but I still enjoy learning. I gain a sense of satisfaction whenever I learn something new. Specific to technology, exposure to new concepts helps me understand how things work together. I cannot count the number of times where I watched over someone’s shoulder, or watched someone on a shared screen, to learn about a new tool or technique, or a different way to set up my desktop or environment.

    Watching and listening to people is my preferred way to learn, but other forms of education – reading IBM Redbooks and …

    Read more
  • Talk Is Cheap, Action Is Costly

    February 1, 2021 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    Companies pick the platforms for their mission critical systems so they can run them for decades. And it is a very, very big deal when they decide to change those platforms. And, furthermore, it is a hell of a lot harder to change these platforms than many people think, and that is because most of the value of those platforms is locked up in the applications and databases that run atop the servers, operating systems, and middleware.

    It is with this in mind that we always take any survey data that asks IT executives if and when they are going …

    Read more
  • IBM i Software And Power Systems Upgrades Keep Rolling Forward

    January 18, 2021 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    During tough economic times, I am fond of reminding people – and especially myself as I try to remain calm in a recession or whatever the heck this is we are dealing with now during the coronavirus pandemic – that business, in the aggregate, never goes to zero. No matter how bad it gets, thus far in the modern era starting perhaps with the Renaissance and maybe even longer but certainly since the agricultural and industrial revolutions in the 1700s, people still need stuff and they need people to grow or make it.

    That doesn’t mean it is easy, however. …

    Read more
  • To 2032 . . . And Beyond!

    December 7, 2020 Timothy Prickett Morgan

    As you sit here in 2020, can you even imagine 2032? Can you imagine beyond that? Oddly enough, I can imagine three or four decades out from here a lot more easily than I can do a dozen years, even though I know the error bars get longer and the probabilistic clouds get fuzzier the further into the future you wander with your mind. So what does it mean, really, when Big Blue commits to support the IBM i platform at least until 2032, a mere dozen years away in a platform that, depending on how you want to …

    Read more

Previous Articles Next Articles

Content archive

  • The Four Hundred
  • Four Hundred Stuff
  • Four Hundred Guru

Recent Posts

  • Positive News From The Kyndryl Mainframe Modernization Report
  • NAViGATE, inPower 2025 On Tap for September 2025
  • Guru: WCA4i And Granite – Because You’ve Got Bigger Things To Build
  • As I See It: Digital Coup
  • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Number 37
  • AI Is Coming for ERP. How Will IBM i Respond?
  • The Power And Storage Price Wiggling Continues – Again
  • LaserVault Adds Multi-Path Support To ViTL
  • As I See It: Spacing Out
  • IBM i PTF Guide, Volume 27, Numbers 34, 35, And 36

Subscribe

To get news from IT Jungle sent to your inbox every week, subscribe to our newsletter.

Pages

  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Contributors
  • Four Hundred Monitor
  • IBM i PTF Guide
  • Media Kit
  • Subscribe

Search

Copyright © 2025 IT Jungle