,
on 01/16/2014
at 07:32 AM, John McKown said:
>Not a direct response to your question, but something that has been
>running around in my mind lately (lots of room there). Why email?
There are several reasons for email and SMS text
1) it's easy
2) everyone who runs a job probably has an emai
I have to agree with you that some people will hate it no matter which choice
we take, but I think that in this case, providing information that would be
usable only in some cases is preferable.
one thing that I had not considered previously is that I know (programatically)
what the condition c
I really like that idea. I'm going to try to simulate that one as a test, then
I'll program it if it works out the way I hope it does.
Thank you very much
If you're planning to insert a Web link in the e-mail -- "Click Here for
More Information" or similar -- then you can "cheat" a bit. T
How about a tinyurl style URL with a SMS message to email or twitter.
On Sat, Jan 18, 2014 at 9:02 PM, Shmuel Metz (Seymour J.)
wrote:
> In
> ,
> on 01/16/2014
>at 07:32 AM, John McKown said:
>
>>Not a direct response to your question, but something that has been
>>running around in my mind
In <7216707982190237.wa.brianwestermansyzygyinc@listserv.ua.edu>,
on 01/16/2014
at 12:57 AM, Brian Westerman said:
>Any comments or suggestions?
You can't please everybody, and what please a user in the more common
scenarios might not please him in exceptional cases. My advice is to
have
In
,
on 01/16/2014
at 07:32 AM, John McKown said:
>Not a direct response to your question, but something that has been
>running around in my mind lately (lots of room there). Why email?
Because it's well nigh universal. Because it doesn't have draconian
limits on message size.
--
Shmu
If I remember correctly(it has been a while) Top Secret has the same
functionality as ACF2 - very easy to clone users.
On 17 January 2014 18:34, Mark Zelden wrote:
> On Fri, 17 Jan 2014 16:56:29 +0100, R.S.
> wrote:
>
> >Well, I grew up with RACF with no add-on product installed. Since time I
Brian,
If you're planning to insert a Web link in the e-mail -- "Click Here for
More Information" or similar -- then you can "cheat" a bit. The URL itself
could contain the extra statistics as parameters. Then, when the user
clicks on the link, the server (z/OS) simply grabs the parameters from th