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In a message dated 97-12-22 08:23:04 EST, you write: > Subj: Re: 1998 Predictions > Date: 97-12-22 08:23:04 EST > From: qappdsn@ibm.net (James W. Kilgore) > Sender: mcsnet!midrange.com!midrange-l-owner@Mcs.Net, owner-midrange-l@ > midrange.com > Reply-to: MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com > To: MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com > > Dean, > > Love ya! I've done some snipping and adding my 2 cents...BTW my daughter > got me > some GREAT Ethiopian beans which I've slammed into the obligatory > occupational IV and full valved the sucker! Gotta love that java. ;-) > > DAsmussen wrote: > > > Hello All! > > > > As usual, these predictions are meant to be fun rather than prescient, so > > don't stake your portfolio on them (regardless of the outcome of last year's > > flock)! > > > > 1. AS/400 sales will remain flat, due in equal parts to most companys' focus > > on the Y2K issue rather than technology enhancements, and IBM's _IDIOTIC_ > > pricing decision for V4 which has alienated the group that would have been > > "first in line" with JAVA solutions for the AS/400. > > Like I said, gotta love that java...I'm not sure that 1998 will see a total flat > line. There are still too many in denial. It may slow down due to some hauntings > but IMHO the true hardware flatten will occur in 1999 when their face is pressed > REAL HARD against the reality checks. Say that a company has a really good > customer who they gave 120 day terms to books a sale in Sept. 1999 and shows > up on credit hold for being 100 years delinquent. (And the poor IS manager is > going to be sitting there going: "Remember when...." and the big guy is going to > say " I don't care about then, I want this fixed NOW!!"..so much for Labor Day > weekend with the family) > > > 2. Network station sales will remain flat as well, precluding an announcement > > from IBM that allows users to run PC-based applications without the expensive > > NT server requirements. The hardware has fallen in price, so where is the > > software? > > NC's will sell to the larger companies that want to control costs and availability > to goofing off on a PC. AFAIK NT Server is not a requirement today. Oh, you > said > PC-based applications, but you must have meant Win doze based. I stand > corrected. :)Even the small companies I've worked with we reformat any PC hard > drives and partition it to only hold the minimum for a connection. If someone is > doing company related work, it's on a shared (secured by group) server or there is > no space left on a user machine to store it. If someone wants to do resumes/ > games, go home and do it. Remember, IBM's real customers have thousands, > tens of thousands or maybe even hundreds of thousands of users. A site with only > hundreds of users they leave up to the "partners" to handle. > > > > 3. Lou G will resign as head of IBM, seeking "new opportunities". Real > > reason? He's made all of the management changes he can at IBM, and will > leave > > to allow the company to "sink or swim" based upon its own technology and a > new > > leader that will pursue that focus. > > There always is the unspoken third outcome...swim poorly...not sinking, no > gold > medals..plain vanilla. > > > > > > > 4. "Native Notes" will fail at inception, because nobody has time to > > implement it _AND_ Y2K compliant software. Should have come out with it > last > > year... > > Unless it's marketed as a "solution". But I think you're right. > > > 5. IBM will announce several hardware platforms to "fill the gaps" in its > > current product lines, most of which will be met with a "big yawn" due to > the > > above stated pre-occupations with Y2K over hardware. > > Nitch solutions will still find their place. If a software products fills a > company's needs it's real nice to have hardware with a robust Y2K compliant > OS to > run it on. Holey windows Batman! > > > 6. JAVA/400 will gain a real foothold over other languages/400 because > > vendors that are already Y2K compliant will focus their efforts there. > > Vendors that were averse to converting their software to C++ for the ( > proper) > > reason that UNIX wasn't as "OPEN" as most would have you believe will > begin to > > port to JAVA. > > That works for the UNIX folks trying to marry up, but for the rest of us > that > already have Y2K compliant RPG/400 code we're looking at broadening a > customer > base to smaller users (read as more support calls, higher cost, lower > margins, > etc.) so from a purely business view point would you rather have a single > installation of 200 users of RPG or 10 installations of 20 users of changing > JAVA, > or 40 installations of 5 users of changing JAVA? (I think the keyword here > is > "changing") How many sales per year do you need for the 200 user shop vs the > 5 > user shop at competitive prices to break even and what's your cost to > support that > number of installations? For us, at this time, JAVA is an intellectual > hobby and > not a livelihood. It's sort of like being in school to learn it, we even > try to > replicate existing applications to find the holes. But for front line > applications it's not ready for prime time. It is good for system > management > software and application development software. Ya see, we don't sell > software to > programmers, we sell to companies that need a Payroll application. In time > we > believe that JAVA might (repeat might) do what UNIX/C was meant to, but we' > re not > about to throw another $x,000,000 into it until we have that warm and fuzzy > feeling. > > > 7. The US Justice Department will _FINALLY_ deliver Microsoft its come- > > uppance -- have you _seen_ the c###, uh stuff, that MS tried to pull? > > The last I heard, a judge got on a PC, moused over to the IE icon, pressed > right > (how apropos) button, selected "delete", got "are you sure", replied "yes", > and > concluded: Removal of IE is not as difficult as M$ argued. The wheels do > grind > slowly but they sure do grind. :) :( but then again, the last judge that > said > that got replaced.) BTW, what's the going price for a judge now a days? =:- > o > > > > > > > 8. OS/2 will finally bite the dust, although undeservedly. IBM's > > incompetence, rather than OS/2's relative value, will finish it off. The > > revenue stream is just too small for the effort required by the > manufacturer > > to "keep it current". > > That may very well be true stateside. The Euro community has AFAIK slam > dunked M$ > for OS/2 in 1996. At least that's the last I heard when I was a hot and > heavy > OS/2 bigot. > > > > > > > 9. Y2K will have all of us busy for the next four years, at least. > > True. I'll we've received from our clients is a smiling confidence that > they will > be taken care of in the future as they have in the past, change topic, what' > s on > the plate for today. The ball just gets lobed back to our side of the court. > The > individuals have today to worry about, it's our job to worry about today and > tomorrow. > > > > > > > 10. As with last year, we'll all meet here next year and be equally as > wrong. > > If we meet last year's averages, that wouldn't be a bad thing, would it? > > > > Well just between you, me and the fence post last year was great. Next year > will > be better, and 1999 will be better yet. Why? Because of a line from a movie > I > heard a long, long time ago: "Lack of planning on your part does not > consitute an > emergancy on my part." The same one's who have denied reality, budgets and > man > power requests today are going to do some real hard back peddaling tomorrow. > Just > make sure that all of your requests are in writting and cc'ed up the line, 'cause > when they are in the corner they just might get ugly! ;-) > > Peace and a joyous holiday season to all. +--- | This is the Midrange System Mailing List! | To submit a new message, send your mail to MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com. | To subscribe to this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-SUB@midrange.com. | To unsubscribe from this list send email to MIDRANGE-L-UNSUB@midrange.com. | Questions should be directed to the list owner/operator: david@midrange.com +---
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