On 4/18/18 1:50 PM, Steve Beaver wrote:
IBM ALCS became zTFP. That is generally all in Assembler, unless you use
JAVA. But JAVA is way too slow
TPF has had C/C++ since 1997.
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On 8/3/17 10:13 AM, Tony Thigpen wrote:
1) The ip address has to be available from SE laptop in the cpu. If you
have the connections between the HMC and the SE on a isolated network,
then the ftp box has to also be on that same isolated network.
We have our HMC on an internal company network
On 7/19/16 7:57 AM, Ken Smith wrote:
My organization has just posted a CICS sysprog job (below). There's good
support for Telecommunting here and if you've got solid skills working
remote should not be a deal breaker. Problem is the pay is well below
market rates. We have several unfilled pos
I'm in the process of laying out a small mainframe computer room. Has
IBM ever provided templates for their mainframe equipment, preferably in
AutoCAD *.dwg format? (TurboCAD would be an acceptable alternative, it's
what I'm using.) I would think such aids would be quite useful to many
people i
I remember some (many!) years back when scientists and researchers
thought that 1-micron might be an impenetrable barrier to further
miniaturization.
On 7/9/15 6:08 AM, John McKown wrote:
http://arstechnica.co.uk/gadgets/2015/07/ibm-unveils-industrys-first-7nm-chip-moving-beyond-silicon/
IBM,
On 3/10/15 8:19 PM, Charles Mills wrote:
Windows support costs are hard to identify. We know who supports
the mainframe; they work for mainframe IT. But Windows in each
department is supported in his "spare time" by that bright
computer whiz kid in that department, and he is on their payroll.
IBM supplies a utility program that lists these IDRs. Determining its
name is left as an exercise for the reader.
Along time ago, in a galaxy far, far away I found AMBLIST to be very
helpful in this task!
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On 7/8/14, 9:57 AM, Dave Salt wrote:
> I hear you, and I've heard that same argument many times. But it
> makes absolutely no sense to me. If we take the example of a
> company that spends 10 million dollars a year to employ 100
> mainframe developers, and that company licenses a tool that
> impr
Your link points to a stock photo of an IBM 360 model ???. The system
featured in Mad Men is a 360 model 30. Just like the one I used to learn
assembly language programming!
On 5/12/14, 9:57 AM, Dave Jones wrote:
A posting to the VM list from Billy Bingham:
I haven't watched Mad Men before, b
We had a somewhat similar problem a few years ago. In our csse it turned
out to be a firewall issue. An internal name server or resolver was
trying to resolve a host name using an outside name server. The internal
system was sending out EDNS queries, but our Cisco firewall/VPN
appliance had an
For those of my fellow listers who might not be watching AMC's "Mad
Men", a story arc over the last three episodes has been the acquisition
of a computer by Don Draper's ad agency. In tonight's episode it was
finally wheeled into the new computer room: an IBM 360 model 30! It
looks just like th
On 4/9/14, 9:29 AM, John McKown wrote:
OK, not a big mainframe impact. But how many of us started programming by
using Basic on something like an Apple ][?
https://www.dartmouth.edu/basicfifty/
Maybe not a BIG mainframe impact, but BASIC certainly had it's place in
the mainframe sun, starting
On 3/8/14, 6:49 PM, Shmuel Metz , Seymour J. wrote:
In
,
on 03/07/2014
at 08:50 PM, "Blaicher, Christopher Y."
said:
When working for a third party disk vendor I was in a computer room
and there was an IBM CE working on a 360/45.
No such animal; I might believe 360/40 or 370/145.
But t
On 1/23/14, 7:33 AM, Shmuel Metz , Seymour J. wrote:
In <0384493556120387.wa.paulgboulderaim@listserv.ua.edu>, on
01/22/2014
at 08:21 PM, Paul Gilmartin said:
On Wed, 22 Jan 2014 20:14:58 -0600, Mike Schwab wrote:
http://publibfi.boulder.ibm.com/epubs/pdf/dz9zr009.pdf
Sept 2012.
I
On 1/7/14 3:05 AM, Elardus Engelbrecht wrote:
Timothy Sipples wrote:
1A. Users want Web-based access, OK. May I assume that means (or could soon
mean) mobile as well (iPads, Android devices, and so on)?
Can you do SSL connection on those toys? [1]
ALL of the iOS and Android devices that I
On 12/1/13 7:51 AM, Dan Espen wrote:
Actually, your whole description is bizarre and I think wrong.
With a UNIX file, how do I NOT know where /var/log/messages is?
As long as you use a full path, you know where everything is.
I believe the issue some people are trying to address with a Unix
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