Well we have to all remember that z/VM, z/OS and the like
are all niche markets.

 

I love to go the MVMUG (NYC area) and hear IBM people tell
us about the wonderful things that z/VM is doing and what it will do in the
future, but we all have to keep in mind that relatively speaking mainframes are
few and far between.

 

However, after MVMUG IBM presentations, some how it still
gives me hope that z/VM will survive well into the future in one form or
another.



--- On Mon, 4/5/10, Schuh, Richard <rsc...@visa.com> wrote:

From: Schuh, Richard <rsc...@visa.com>
Subject: Re: acm/vmware
To: IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU
Date: Monday, April 5, 2010, 3:11 PM

No argument here. One reason it is so tough is that some shops would require 
that every word pass through a legal department filter. His makes the real 
burden one of distinguishing between dragons and windmills.

Regards, 
Richard Schuh 

 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: The IBM z/VM Operating System 
> [mailto:ib...@listserv.uark.edu] On Behalf Of Gabe Goldberg
> Sent: Sunday, April 04, 2010 11:07 AM
> To: IBMVM@LISTSERV.UARK.EDU
> Subject: Re: acm/vmware


> But it's generally tough recruiting profile subjects, even 
> though the process isn't burdensome or threatening. Sites can 
> give enough detail to convincingly demonstrate (not describe 
> or explain, there's a difference) why mainframes have been 
> valuable to them. But proprietary/competitive/sensitive 
> information need not be included. It's not investigative 
> journalism and profile authors aren't 60 Minutes' Mike Wallace.
> 



      

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