Trevor,

It seems to me that most techies in our world are just not willing to look outside their small green box. Here are some simple facts:
1) eServer is the BRAND
2) iSeries is the FAMILY
3) i5 is the current generation
4) AS/400 is something that is no longer sold
5) Websphere is a BRAND
6) Websphere Application Server is a Websphere PRODUCT
7) WDSC is a Websphere PRODUCT
If this is so simple, then why are so many people confused?  Even the "in 
the know" people don't understand that i5 is a generation rather than a 
replacement for the name "iSeries". Certainly the average end consumer 
doesn't.
Yes, technically each of these things has a distinct meaning, and yes, if 
you want to explain what they are, it's possible to explain.
But it's not intuitive.  And that's the point.


And, if we keep whining about it, then our IBM marketing folks might do something! Oh WAIT!!! THEY ARE!! It is time to stop whining about it, and get with the program. If we wish for the industry to consider our platform outdated technology, then we should keep talking AS/400. If we want our platform to flourish, then we should get behind it and promote the new era of computing that iSeries has ushered in...
I agree that people should use the term iSeries.  I always do, both in 
casual conversation, and in the things that I publish.
I dont' see why you're getting so excited, though. Around 30% of iSeries 
applications are still being written and maintained in RPG III!  These are 
old clunky green screen applications like the ones written in the 70's and 
80's. Another 30% of applications are written in RPG IV, but without 
modularity, without ILE concepts or an MVC design.  They're the same 
monolithic 70's and 80's programs that people wrote in RPG III, with 
slightly different syntax.
Heck, I just read a message on RPG400-L where someone wants to write 
e-mail validation software in RPG III. To me, that's sort of like buying 
an iPod for an Amish person.
As long as our programmers continue to churn out outdated, ugly, 
1980's-style software, and that's the main base of applications for the 
iSeries, all of this marketing stuff is going nowhere.
We need to reach the managers running iSeries shops and make it clear to 
them that it's time to focus on upgrading their employee's skills, and 
updating their software to at least the 1998 level of sophistication, if 
not to 2005.
Only then will we be able to project the newer, more modern, image. 
Using the new name isn't enough.





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