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----- Original Message ----- From: "jt" <jt@ee.net> To: <midrange-l@midrange.com> Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2001 10:45 PM Subject: RE: Proprietary Systems... > In marketing, some customers are VERY loyal to brand, and some aren't. VERY > hard to get the first group to switch brands... (Unless you announce that > brand isn't going to be available, that is...:-) > > Never worked on HP... So what kind of DB does e3000 run on, indexed files, as I remember (but that was long ago) > and how hard > would it be to convert to DB2/400? Are the reports true of a fair about of > in-house CBL? Yes. COBOL/400 is something of a strange beast, (I mean if you are coming from minicomputer COBOL, as I did) particularly screen files. The only way you could translate those programs to the AS/400 is if you took the screen handling and made it calls to a client server module, and put the screen handling on PCs. I could not begin to tell you how it might perform, since the program would have to wake up and process each field input as an interactive cycle - of course if you are avoiding CINT that might be pretty fast. I think the applications are likely to be migrated to Unix on HP, if they haven't already. I'll write a code translator and PC screen handler, but it will cost about a million to do the project. Only IBM has pockets that deep - I sure wouldn't do it on spec. The only mini I ever saw do page mode screens was Wang VS, I think. NCR and Burroughs used them on their mainframes, but not minis. Most minis used screens that came from the glass tty evolution - display a bunch of field descriptions on the screen with line and position and attribute, then accept them one by one in interactive mode. Uses up a lot of processor but it's easy to write code for. AS/400 is a downsized mainframe screen - same full screen mode, attribute bytes between fields (weird!) Fill in all the fields and hit transmit - I mean enter.
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