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Tom, IBM has already done that, and spent tons of time and money promoting it, Very few students will even look at it. It doesn't do games. All those kids are thinking one thought: "I'm going to write the next great game and get stinking rich." --------------------------------------------------------- Booth Martin http://www.MartinVT.com Booth@xxxxxxxxxxxx --------------------------------------------------------- -------Original Message------- From: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion Date: Monday, November 03, 2003 09:34:34 To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion Subject: RE: WHAT IS THE BEST WAY TO BRING NEW CUSTOMERS TO THE ISERIES You may be right in that it's too late for the current generation. One approach that IBM could take would be the same back-end that others have taken - give an iSeries server to college computer labs. Graduates will have experience on our favorite platform, and probably even a preference for it. But that's only part of the equation - the college computer science departments also need to teach how to evaluate computer hardware in the enterprise. I know that our local college and university never even bring the subject up. Tom Hightower Solutions, Inc http://www.simas.com "DeLong, Eric" <EDeLong@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent by: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx 11/03/2003 08:34 AM Please respond to Midrange Systems Technical Discussion To: "'Midrange Systems Technical Discussion'" <midrange-l@midrange com> cc: Subject: RE: WHAT IS THE BEST WAY TO BRING NEW CUSTOMERS TO THE ISERIES Reality TV show, "IBM Presents - Hackers Challenge". IBM hardens a network and then teams of hackers get to try to bash away at it. First up, Team MIT....<g> I really don't expect to see this type of TV advertising, but as to reaching the decision makers, just who do you think these iSeries buyers go to for fast advice about computers? Their kids (who will also be the decision makers of tomorrow).... Maybe there's no direct way to reach this current generation.... Eric DeLong
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