A thoroughbred Web-based newcomer, IBM DB2 Web Query for System i has a hipper feel and gives reports a fresh look.
Like those of an aged race horse, the glory days have passed for IBM Query for iSeries (aka Query/400).
A thoroughbred Web-based newcomer, IBM DB2 Web Query for System i has a hipper feel and gives reports a fresh look.
Like those of an aged race horse, the glory days have passed for IBM Query for iSeries (aka Query/400).
In addition, Big Blue has crafted several System i offerings for customers with other interests.
About two or three times a year, IBM dedicates a day to releasing a small yet significant series of System i announcements. It just so happens that last Tuesday was one of those days.
Ever hear "They don't make those anymore!" when trying to get something fixed?
Vision replicate1 simplifies the real-time or scheduled sharing of data, including in complex, heterogeneous IT environments.
Over the years, many, if not most, organizations have become saddled with at least a few information silos and incompatible applications. The reasons for this are varied. Rightly or wrongly, the organization decided to buy best-of-breed applications, regardless of the platforms they ran on. Renegade user departments bought their own applications without the oversight of the IT department. Mergers and acquisitions brought together a motley collection of applications, each built on its own database. The list of rationalizations goes on.
Data Manager reduces storage costs and improves application and infrastructure software performance by archiving obsolete data.
Data Manager, from Vision Solutions, is a sophisticated archiving tool that can help companies tame their increasingly unruly, mammoth databases. The issue that Data Manager addresses arises because databases tend to grow relentlessly as companies both expand the types of information they store and, more importantly, continue to record transactions and other records without deleting old data—no matter how obsolete that data may become.
The last time many organizations extensively culled old data from their databases was when they undertook Y2K remedial actions more than seven years ago. Furthermore, because prudently proactive companies began Y2K remediation projects early, considerable data that is even more ancient than that may sit in their databases as an unwanted consequence of their judicious efforts.
The IBM Academic Initiative for System i is building System i skills, enhancing IT programs at colleges and universities, and helping to improve students' lives.
If your outlook on the future of System i ever sours and you feel disheartened as a result, talk to students taking System i courses in colleges and universities. Speak also to recent graduates now working in System i shops. And talk as well to educators teaching a System i–based curriculum. The conversations will brighten your outlook and your day.
Since the two vendors disagree about almost everything, is it any surprise that they part ways on this subject?
While SAP and Oracle may be fighting viciously for the hearts and minds of enterprise application users, there is one part of the market where they will not compete...at least for now. This was just one interesting fact that emerged from recent announcements by the two software giants that will affect their customers, not to mention users of the System i. Let's examine those announcements to see what else we can glean from them.
Technology's charms can lull even the most ardent technophobe into a state of apathy, but it won't last long.
Sometimes, bad things happen to technophobes for good reason.
Cruising through life in relative comfort and happiness in an unwitting truce with technology for weeks at a time is no way for a guy like me to live. After all, I've got a potent grudge to nurture against technology's insidious influence, and a man who is—of all things—content can't possibly cultivate fear and loathing within himself. Fear and loathing are muscles; they must be exercised.