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Is it time for ALL the product marketing to stop. Once this gets started it goes on and on! > > From: trevor perry > > > > First, "screen scraping". Our friend Joe > > Oh, it's going to be one of those days, I can see. <sigh> > > > slams products that are "screen scrapers" because they are not JSP. > > Because they are not open. > > > creen scraping does not refer any more to > > reading a 5250 data stream, but it now includes any product that simply > > recreates the 5250 data stream in a new Windows-type frame - > > including HTML. > > Trevor, thank you for trying to make us swallow your marketing bilge, but > despite your efforts, screen scraping is just what it has always been: > sitting on the 5250 data stream, just like newlook does. > > > > If your product simply recreates the 24x80 (or 27x132) > > experience, then you > > have just "screen scraped". Joe's product may be technologically > > intriguing, > > but along with many of the competition, he is just taking what > > you have, and > > deploying the same stuff in a browser window. Screen scraping does not get > > you far along the GUI road. > > > If a vendor is calling > > my application software a "pig", then I would be a little > > concerned at their ability to understand the challenges I am > > about to face. > > I love listening to marketing doublespeak. Is taking what you have and > redploying it good or bad? Let us know where you stand on that question > someday, will you? > > Anyway, PSC/400 is nothing like any other product out there, except perhaps > WebFacing. It is a radically different approach. It is an OO Facade over > the traditional server/client model. The server/client model includes > interfaces such as CCP NEP/MRT, CICS and 5250. > > Do you realize that the largest asset these people have is their legacy > programs and more importantly their legacy programmers? They should be able > to continue developing in COBOL or RPG and have one guy with industry > standard JSP skills to pretty up the final product. The product should then > be available to anybody with a browser. That's what PSC/400 does. > > If you need a fat client, newlook is as good a choice as any, I suppose. > But fat clients are rarely needed in the business world, which is why you > don't see a fat-client eBay or a fat-client Yahoo or a fat-client Amazon, or > Best Buy, or Circuit City, or Ameritrade or Ing or Citibank or... > > Fat clients is in most cases the wrong UI choice. > > > > You may have to learn JSP, you may have to learn Websphere, or > > you may have > > to learn newlook. > > WebSphere is an IBM standard, JSP is a worldwide open standard, and newlook > is proprietary. Not really the same, Trevor. > > > > The more you learn, the better the end result, > > Except that with newlook, this doesn't translate except to more newlook. > > > > And, if someone says they have a thin client, but you need > > to install a Java Servlet or Applet - you just installed a fat > > client. > > As has been pointed out before, your lack of technical expertise in this > area is really quite severe - servlets never reside on the the client. The > JSP Model II architecture uses pure industry standard HTML to communicate > with browsers. > > I think you may want to review your knowledge in this area. You probably > should understand at least the basics of the architecture before you offer > any advice. I can critique fat client designs because I've designed thin > and thick client interfaces for over 20 years, and of course, I literally > wrote the book on revitalization. You say you understand how my software > works, but all of the concepts (including a complete working example of all > the software) are actually available publicly in my book, "eDeployment: The > Fastest Path to the Web". > > > > One P.S. > > It is very apparent that Joe does not understand newlook, but has simply > > read some marketing material. On the other hand, I do not fully understand > > his software - my comments are made from reading his marketing > > material and > > his numerous sales pitches on these forums. I believe I have > > represented his > > software correctly. > > I understand newlook fine. It's a fat client with two deployment options. > One is a screen scraper, the otehr uses client/server hooks. The point is, > nobody can use newlook out of the box to redeploy a 1500 screen system > overnight without using the screen scraper component. > > With PSC/400, you can. > > _______________________________________________ > This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L) mailing list > To post a message email: MIDRANGE-L@xxxxxxxxxxxx > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, > visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/midrange-l > or email: MIDRANGE-L-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx > Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives > at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l. > > Dave Dunfield Midwest Integrated Systems Resources AS/400 and LANSA Expert PO Box 1481 Portage, MI 49081 Phone-269-373-3049 Cell 269-501-5685
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