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Al <This is a vendor response.> We have a product that can read POP3 mailboxes and put the emails into the IFS or into PF members. Then your 400 program could process them. The idea is to have a sufficiently-formatted email sent by a browser or a PC app, so that you could parse it out in an application. If this sounds interesting, please feel free to call me (or anyone) at 888.rjs.soft Thanks Vern -------------- Original message -------------- From: Al Mac <macwheel99@xxxxxxxxxxx> > What's Al's question? > What all is needed on PC end and on 400 end to do data entry to 400 > applications on a PC not connected to the 400? > I think it is doable, but I think it would be frightfully expensive to > implement, unless I am missing something about existing readily available > resources. > > I got an odd question from work. > "Al, is it possible to have a 400 session without having an AS/400" > I mumbled about in theory various AS/400 languages could also run on a PC, > and reminisced about my old punched card days, like "key to diskette", with > equipment that went off the market 40 years ago ... whatcha looking to do > on it? > > Transpires they looking for data entry alternatives to sending a file over > e-mail or direct communications attachment, where a PC gets a 400 session > like via VPN ... is it practical to key in a data batch on a PC, then have > the transaction batch arrive in person or snail mail on some media then > stick it into the 400 as input, and what equipment and software needed to > do that? > > There's already a CD Rom drive on the 400, intended for IBM OS upgrades, I > suppose there must be some way for normal 400 software to access normal > data there, I just have never worked with any. However, it probably would > be more efficient, from a performance perspective, to copy whatever is on > the CD to hard disk, then have 400 software process it there. > > You can only put 1/2 a Gig on a CD. You can put much more on a tape, but > CD drives are standard on PCs, and I seriously doubt PC tape drives are > compatible with what the 400 needs for backup. > > The PC application would have to know what layout is needed for the data in > the file. There would have to be conversion of the data format from > PC--ASCII to 400-EBCDIC, all the stuff taken care of thru Client Access and > Data Transfers ... Oh, say the data could go from PC-unconnected then > PC-connected-to-400 data transfer, on PC media whether CD Rom or Diskette, > although I have had some troubles with CD formats can only be read by > certain CD software. > > The 400 application would have to be modified to be able to accept a batch > of transactions this way, simulating a real human being, where normally the > user keys in some vendor # or order #, and the data is accepted if it meets > certain valid combinations, and there is no provision for handling data > entered that is not valid, which includes incomplete input where some > mandatory field is not filled in with something valid, and the data to the > 400 application results from a combination of what the user entered, and > what happened when the control #s are validated. > > I did such a modification on the old System/36 where they wanted scrap > transactions recorded, but felt they were too much trouble to key in. I > got the scrap data from another application, cloned the data entry program > then simulated what it did with human keystrokes, only supplied the data > stream from my work file instead of a real human being. > > - > Al Macintyre > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:AlMac > http://www.ryze.com/go/Al9Mac > BPCS/400 Computer Janitor ... see > http://radio.weblogs.com/0107846/stories/2002/11/08/bpcsDocSources.html > -- > 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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