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Hello Mike, You wrote: >If Leif is right, IBM's answer is that I should move to Linux, and then >when I get big enough I can buy an iSeries (or whatever) to run it on. >Frankly, I don't see why anyone at IBM would think that was intelligent >advice. I don't know how many times I have to say this: SERVICES, SERVICES, SERVICES. IBM is becoming a services company (as in a company that makes money from various services as opposed to a company that provides service -- if you get my meaning). Search the RPG400-L and MIDRANGE-L archives for previous comments of mine on this topic. Unix, WinDOS, and anything else you care to name has more services potential than AS/400 simply because they are less easy to use, less easy to manage, cost more in the long run, etc. Mostly this is a management issue. I have no doubt that most technical people are doing their best and believe their products are the best (it's just that so many of them don't know any better so they build overly complex stuff). It concerns management on both sides: the customer and the vendor. If I am a computer company with 500 people on staff my primary concern is keeping those people generating revenue. If I sell AS/400's to my customers then after the initial sale I never hear from them. The occasional upgrade, a few phone calls, etc. I must constantly find new customers to keep my staff productive. If I sell my customers on WinDOS or Unix then my staff will be doing something for my customers every second week (tweaking this, fixing that, installing something else). My staff are not truly productive but they are charging the customer and thus generating revenue and that is all a "modern" company is concerned with. One of Thomas Watson Jr.'s beliefs was "IBM should first take care of customer's profits, then should take care of employee's profits, and if those two are taken care of then shareholder's profits will be taken care of automatically." What we have now are corporate manager's rewarded with stock options so they manage the company according to the stock price because that is in their own interest. The stock price is a reflection of nothing more than perceived company profits and as we've all seen recently corporate America has been lying, cheating, and fraudulently manipulating its books in order to provide unreasonable profits to the stock market. I'm not naive enough to believe this occurs only in America (witness the HIH and OneTel fiascos in Australia) but corporate America has taken it to all new highs. I expect shareholders to receive a return on their investment but there is such a thing as reasonable return. Corporate America seems bent on extracting the last cent (nickel, dime, quarter, whatever) for the sole purpose of keeping a high share price. The motivating factor is purely GREED -- and greed is NOT good. Greed exposes gullibility. Those two factors caused the dot-com fiasco and caused the railway speculation fiasco of a previous era. Similar boom and bust cycles have occurred historically about every 50-80 years when sharp and unethical operators have presented get-rich-quick schemes to the greedy and gullible. I have no doubt it will happen again. How can we correct this sad state of affairs? By instilling ethics in management graduates. By requiring corporations to have a sense of social justice. By shareholders demanding better behaviour from the companies in which they invest. By companies not employing greedy people as senior managers. By holding directors and senior managers accountable. By paying senior management commensurate with their abilities and results but not giving them exorbitant salaries and options. Is a CEO worth twice what the guy on the shop floor gets? Probably. Is he worth 10 times? Maybe. Is he worth twenty times? I doubt it. Perhaps that requires too high a level of altruism? OK, altruism is not really part of human nature. Even people who are involved in supposedly altruistic endeavours are doing it for what they personally get out of it rather than any actual benefit to the supposed beneficiary. What we need is for customers to demand BETTER products instead of simply PRETTIER products. Customers must realise they've been putting up with crap and stop. They must start thinking for themselves instead of the current practice of 'managing by magazine' and doing whatever they read about in the popular press. They must question the marketing spin. What we need is for IBM management to return to the previous practices of doing the right thing by the customer and selling them what is best for them instead of taking the easy path and selling the customer what the customer thinks they want. That's not SELLING, that's simply taking money from a mug punter. Is this going to happen? Not in my lifetime! Read Anthony Trollope's "The Way We Live Now" which was written over a century ago and compare it to current behaviour. Nothing has changed. Regards, Simon Coulter. -------------------------------------------------------------------- FlyByNight Software AS/400 Technical Specialists http://www.flybynight.com.au/ Phone: +61 3 9419 0175 Mobile: +61 0411 091 400 /"\ Fax: +61 3 9419 0175 mailto: shc@flybynight.com.au \ / X ASCII Ribbon campaign against HTML E-Mail / \ --------------------------------------------------------------------
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