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my bottom line would be that if a program running in the os400 part of the system cannot control, access or integrate with the component in question, then that component is not part of the system. -Steve On Fri, 4 Mar 2005 11:52:14 -0500, Walden H. Leverich <WaldenL@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > OK, this may sound like a stupid question, but what is an i5 (or iSeries > or AS/400)? I don't want the answer "It's the new iSeries", I mean what > do you consider to be the i5? When you're running on an i5, what are you > doing? > > For example, I was reading iSeries magazine (I think that was it) > recently, and someone announced the availability of a Citrix Metaframe > component for the i5. "Interesting" I thought, then I read the fine > print, "only available on i5's with the IXS adapter" so actually, it's a > Windows app, running on a blade in the back of an i5. Is the i5 now a > blade server? > > Elsewhere (on this list) I read a post about someone having a really bad > week. Part of the bad week involved having to reboot the Domino Sametime > server and a Linux partition. So is the i5, now just a piece of hardware > on which we run some not-so-stable operating systems? > > I visited a customer a couple of weeks ago that swore up and down that > he was running WebSphere "on the iSeries". Well, I looked high and low > and I couldn't find it. Finally tracked it down to WebSphere on W2K, > running on an IXS, again is that "on the iSeries"? > > I've also seen posts about people wondering if there are "native" ports > of PHP, even though it's available in PASE. So is PASE not "native". Is > something that runs on PASE not "native" to the machine? DNS is in > there. So's DHCP. People say their i5 does DNS, don't they? > > I myself got caught up in this, I'm doing a number of user group > presentations next week on HTML and ASP.NET, and someone asked me if > they could promote the meetings by saying that I'd look at running .NET > _on_ the i5. My quick response was, "no, you can't do that." but now I'm > wondering, can I? If it's on an IXS in the back of the i5 can I claim > it's on an i5? > > So, what is an i5 (iSeries, AS/400)? What does it mean to you? > > I'll tell you my answer. An i5 runs OS/400. If it runs in OS/400 > (including QSHELL and PASE) then it's running "on" an i5. AIX and Linux > partitions don't count for me, I might as well do them on a pSeries. And > the IXS, well hell, I sure don't consider the i5 to be a big blade > server, so anything running on an IXS isn't running "on" an i5 as far as > I'm concerned. > > What do others think? > > -Walden > > ------------ > Walden H Leverich III > President & CEO > Tech Software > (516) 627-3800 x11 > WaldenL@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > http://www.TechSoftInc.com <http://www.techsoftinc.com/> > > Quiquid latine dictum sit altum viditur. > (Whatever is said in Latin seems profound.) > > -- > 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. > >
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