Jul 9 2009 12:16PM GMT
Posted by: Mark Fontecchio
System i ISVs,
System i resellers
More than 70 System i vendors have joined hands in Japan to form iManifest, a group dedicated to promoting the IBM System i platform.
The slogan for the group is a take off a famous quote by John F. Kennedy, and it goes like this: “Ask not what IBM can do for you, ask what you can do for the IBM i community.” The folks at IBM, though not involved with the group, are supporting it, and even former IBMers like Frank Soltis are behind the effort.
The success of the impromptu group in Japan raises questions about whether the American System i community can get something similar off the ground. Though iSociety is still around, it hasn’t lived up to its original expectations. Maybe it can restructure itself to look more like iManifest?
Some links: The iManifest “declaration,” a column on what we can learn from iManifest, and a call to arms, so to speak, for a similar EMEA-based group.
Here’s an excerpt from the group’s joint declaration:
We do not know of any machine other than IBM i which has resolutely protected user assets for 20 years and would continue to protect them in the future. We think we have a mission to convey its excellence and superiority. We can justifiably describe IBM i as “the miracle in computer history”, especially when we speak to enterprise management, thought leaders in the business world and all those engaged in information system departments.
Every-one in business continues to face a fierce battle, if described in a simple word, to innovate the old to create the new, by incessant managerial and operational innovation. We firmly believe from our communication with many customers and by looking back at our own experience that there would be no progress without innovation in Information Technology to support business.
IBM i is well known for having the largest number of customers using a single systems family. It has retained its brilliant record of No.1 position for more than 10 years in the “Customers’ Satisfaction Survey” conducted every year in Japan by the Nikkei Computer magazine. The platform’s reliability, stability, resilience and high ROI stand out from all others.
Taking the opportunity of IBM i’s 20th anniversary we have established the IBM i Manifest to ask users to again recognize the value and achievements of IBM i. We ask that they renew their firm confidence and belief that IBM i is the best infrastructure available to support managerial and operational innovation.
Further we think that the merits of this excellent system should be shared by many others. More widespread usage of IBM i is the best way for corporations to strengthen their management capability and business power. We have started activities to add to the user community as many new companies as possible. We, the IBM i Manifest initiative support members, have been very proud of assisting our customers over many years with this very rare product, IBM i. We will act widely, in various ways and continuously, to help business-people to recognize the merit, excellence and achievements of IBM i.
Jul 8 2009 5:43PM GMT
Posted by: Mark Fontecchio
IBM i,
Operating systems,
System i blade servers
IBM has just released a Redbook with detailed implementation instructions for JS23 and JS43 IBM BladeCenter blade servers. The 594-page guide (yes, 594) is good both for an overall look at the IBM BladeCenter platform, as well as detailed implementation guidelines for specific operating systems (in addition to IBM i, it also has chapters on AIX, Red Hat Enterprise Linux, and SUSE Linux).
The chapter on IBM i implementation is about 100 pages.
Jul 8 2009 5:35PM GMT
Posted by: Mark Fontecchio
IBM System i
This might be a bit offtopic, but it’s for a good cause. Aaron Bartell, a System i consultant and big proponent of RPG on the platform, is running a marathon in Chicago on Aug. 7. His goal is to raise $10,000 for World Vision, a Christian humanitarian organization that is tackling worldwide child poverty and hunger.
But Bartell is throwing in a twist. For certain landmarks, Bartell has agreed to remove hair from certain parts of his body. At the $1,000 mark, he’ll shave his head. For $2,000, the armpits. And so on, until at the $10,000 mark, Bartell will hand over a hand buzzer to his 4-year-old son and let him get artistic on his head.
Check it out, and if you can, donate.
Jun 25 2009 1:25PM GMT
Posted by: Mark Fontecchio
COMMON
Here are the top concerns of European System i users, according to a survey taken by COMMON Europe:
- Satisfy internal customers
- Treat data security and confidentiality as a business risk
- Improve IT security and continuity
- Receive consistent high quality service and support from vendors
- Keep the skills current for the existing staff
- Make me grow as a more competent individual
- Do fast application development to fulfill business needs
- Build business skills in the information technology shop
- Standardize and consolidate IT infrastructure
- Attract the younger generation to centralized systems
- Easily exchange information with other companies/institutions
- Find applications that fulfill business needs
- Acquire and retain IT personnel
- Correctly measure the value of IT to business
- Integrate document management and unstructured data with core applications
- Assure better data warehousing with real answers to business questions
Jun 25 2009 1:21PM GMT
Posted by: Mark Fontecchio
RPG on System i
Western Power Sports reworked its online presence using Web development tools on the System i, a move that has increased online sales of its power sports equipment fivefold.
Prior to the project, the Boise, Idaho-based company was only generating about 10% of its sales online. Now about half of its sales comes over the Internet, garnering more than 1 million page views, 17,000 orders and about $7.5 million in sales every month.
How did it happen? Well, it almost didn’t. The fast-growing company was outgrowing its outdated Web presence, and needed something that would better integrate with its existing System i platform.
“We didn’t have the time or the ability at that point to develop our own solution,” said Rody Cummings, the company’s IT director. “What we were looking for was a company to sell us a product and also provide a solution they could support.”
What Cummings found was that most products had steep, lengthy learning curves that Western Power Sports didn’t have the time to endure. So the company was leaning toward outsourcing its Web development entirely.
It decided to listen to one more pitch, from a company called Profound Logic. The software vendor sells RPGsp, an RPG-based Web development platform on the System i. Cummings said that halfway through the demonstration, he knew it was something that Western Power Sports could use.
A few weeks later, Western Power Sports had developed a new online platform that was implemented soon after.
“With our previous solution it would have taken a full week of me working with the product along with their team just to get a website online that still had no functionality,” he said.
Jun 25 2009 12:50PM GMT
Posted by: Mark Fontecchio
System i video
nbsp;Midrange.com has four YouTube videos embedded in a post on the benefits of IBM’s Dynamic Infrastructure. The videos are of various System i personalities riffing on how cool the platform is. The videos were reportedly taken at the COMMON show in Reno. They star Trevor Perry, Pete Massiello, Justin Porter and Jim Oberholtzer, and there are a couple more (Wayne Madden and Lew Satur) at an IBM YouTube channel.
Jun 25 2009 12:44PM GMT
Posted by: Mark Fontecchio
IBM System i humor
I just saw this job posting on midrange.com: Psychiatrist, American Hospital Service Group.
The description: “Great opportunity to work for your country as a psychiatrist. Candidate must have 2yrs experience and will evaluate,diagnoses & treat psychiatric disorders.”
Jun 25 2009 12:35PM GMT
Posted by: Mark Fontecchio
Twitter on System i
Usually when I think of the IBM System i, Twitter doesn’t pop into my head. Kisco Information Systems, a longtime IBM System i software vendor, is looking to change that.
Last week the Saranac Lake, N.Y.-based company announced a new release of SNDTWEET, an application that allows users to post, receive and reply to Twitter messages from a System i server. The company pitches the application as a way to turn Twitter into a modern-day SMS system for your shop.
For example, a system running some regular overnight processing could automatically send out a tweet to its followers (ie. the System i administrator and programmers) when it completes. If the tweet doesn’t go out, it’s likely there was a problem. System i Twitter users can send each other messages, or the company’s marketing department could set up a list of tweets to promote company announcements on certain days. Though a Twitter account’s default is to have all its tweets be public to the whole world, you can change that setting to private when you set up an account.
Is relying on Twitter as an SMS service good business practice? That is something you would have to figure out if you’re considering using this product. There are occasional outages on Twitter, and relying on an application to contact a third-party service might not be the best way to do system monitoring. Kisco is offering a 30-day free trial of the product if you want to check it out.
Jun 23 2009 4:17PM GMT
Posted by: Leah Rosin
AS/400,
IBM i,
RPG on System i,
RPGAAS,
cloud computing,
IBM System i staffing,
IBM System i programming
Beyond the world of IBM i, the hottest topic in IT right now is “Cloud Computing,” which is essentially a mix of platform and software-as-a-service (PaaS and SaaS) offerings that are available on-demand. So it was with a little amusement and some interest that I read the press release from vLegaci offering RPGAAS. That’s right, RPG as a service.
“… designed for companies who don’t always have an RPG programmer available, or need quick, cost-effective programming results…”
After a year of reading emails from readers inquiring about a variety of topics, I have to think that there is a market for such a product, and vLegaci’s President, Steve Kilner, says that Gartner’s findings support this supposition.
“Consensus is emerging from IT thought leaders such as Gartner Group and Capers Jones that maintaining and modernizing legacy systems gives the best possible return on IT dollars,” said Kilner. “For businesses with legacy RPG systems, the dwindling pool of RPG programmers poses the challenge of how to get unfamiliar programmers up to speed rapidly on complicated legacy code. vLegaci addresses this through the use of its innovative program comprehension tool, Codelyzer. This static and dynamic analysis tool enables new programmers to quickly assess unfamiliar RPG programs, thereby enabling the concept of a service such as RPGAAS.”
What do you think? Is this a service your company could use?