Here is the tinyurl of Ed's link
http://tinyurl.com/l7x9fek
PRINCETON, N.J. - Freeman Dyson, 91, the famed physicist, author and oracle
of human destiny, is holding forth after tea-time one February afternoon in
the common room of the Institute for Advanced Study.
"Let me tell you the story of h
To answer the question specifically asked, no, you cannot.
But Skip's approach can help you accomplish what you want.
Careful use of naming conventions of things like system names and LPAR
names, and judicious use of symbolics based on those names can help you
too.
Peter Relson
z/OS Core Techn
On Sat, 21 Feb 2015 23:34:42 -0600, Ed Gould wrote:
>http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/what-imitation-
>game-didnt-tell-you-about-alan-turings-greatest-triumph/2015/02/20/
>ffd210b6-b606-11e4-9423-f3d0a1ec335c_story.html
>
>
>What �The Imitation Game� didn�t tell you about Tu
On Sat, Feb 21, 2015 at 6:41 PM, J O Skip Robinson wrote:
>
> SYMDEF(&CTCPID#1='i-xxx,i-yyy') /* SET INPUT ADDRESS LIST */
> SYMDEF(&CTCPOD#1='o-xxx,o-yyy') /* SET OUTPUT ADDRESS LIST */
>
>
For clarification, does 'xxx' represent the address on z196-1, and 'yyy'
the address on z196-2?
Hello,
Thx for your replies, I'm talking about DFSMS ACDS,SCDS and COMMDS (i'll
refer CDSs hereafter). The reason for this question is that I have "all
flavours". Systems with UCAT be SMS managed and CDSs not be sms managed.
CDSs be SMS managed and UCAT not sms managed. I wonder if there was any
"
It occurred to me after my previous post that you were indeed talking about
DFSMS itself. I've never been in-house for a migration to SMS, so I don't know
the history. I could see a chicken-and-egg problem in putting SMS resources
under control of a product that has not yet been installed. ;-)
At 08:56 -0600 on 02/22/2015, Paul Gilmartin wrote about Re: O/T What
The Imitation Game¹ didn¹t tell you abo:
On Sat, 21 Feb 2015 23:34:42 -0600, Ed Gould wrote:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/what-imitation-
game-didnt-tell-you-about-alan-turings-greatest-triumph/201
On Sun, 22 Feb 2015 15:05:29 -0500, Robert A. Rosenberg wrote:
>
>>Unwrapped, I hope:
>>
>>http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/what-imitation-game-didnt-tell-you-about-alan-turings-greatest-triumph/2015/02/20/ffd210b6-b606-11e4-9423-f3d0a1ec335c_story.html
>>
>>Ed needs to get a b
Well what if you just use the higher nodes and navigate?
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/
Does OK in IE11.
Heard Grace Hopper(Adm-USN) speak several times and met her at DOD courses
at Navy Yard. She mentioned Turing several times but don't know
environment. One that
Sheldon,
His logic is not clear to me .can you detail a tad more ..
Regards,
Scott
On Sunday, February 22, 2015, Sheldon Davis wrote:
> I have managed to recreate the problem. I will open a PMR and I will check
> with the developer why he is doing what he is.
> A cobol program reads input
I want to publicly thank Retired Mainframer for leading me to the correct
direction. The problem was that the EBCDIC oriented regmatch_t structure is
defined like this:
typedef struct { /* substring locations - from regexec() */
__off_t rm_so; /* offset of subs
I had this situation once when I was sharing a catalog between two LPARs. The
catalogue were large and were being updated by both systems.
It turn out that when a update from system A is done to the catalog, buffers
are invalidated on system B. When system B need to inquire on a dataset, all
I don't know what the problem is on my end as I am able to click on
the url and it took me to the desired location, so I suspect the
issue is either with the list serv or your mail client.
Ed
On Feb 22, 2015, at 2:05 PM, Robert A. Rosenberg wrote:
At 08:56 -0600 on 02/22/2015, Paul Gilmarti
Hello Ze'ev,
unless the structure is defined with the nonstandard extension Packed
(or _Packed, I don't recall it exactly), all ints or longs will be
aligned on
a 4 byte boundary, that is, in a sequence of int, short, int, short, you
will
get two padding bytes after every short field (which is
To give you an example on the different alignment strategy of (for example)
PL/1 and C:
let's assume a structure
typedef struct
{
short a;
int b;
short c;
int d;
}
example;
in PL/1;
DCL 1 EXAMPLE,
3 A BIN FIXED (15),
3 B BIN FIXED (31),
3 C BIN FIXED (15),
3
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