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The reason that people think the AS/400 is obsolete is because it looks obsolete. We can argue all day long whether terminal interface is better then GUI for certain types of tasks. The Unix guys do this to they will talk and talk about how great the command line interface is, but Unix has a GUI too and when it is appropriate to use they use it. Imagine that instead of developing windows, Microsoft had instead upgraded DOS to support more character sets, and then renamed it "system D", sure you can only use 8 characters in a file name, but that is all you really need for business use. They could add a virtual machine so that you could run "system D" on a 32 bit processor or a 64 bit processor. And everyone would refer to it as a legacy system because it would look OLD. Auto companies spend an enormous amount of money on styling because people's impressions when they look at a product matter. What if Ford had a car they called "system T" which was cheap, reliable, safe, efficient and looked exactly like a model T, do you think anyone would buy it? The AS/400 is a good reliable back end system with some impressive technology under the cover, and I am not necessarily arguing that anything needs to change. But the reason that everyone who is not closely involved with the AS/400 thinks it is a legacy system is because it looks like a legacy system. -----Original Message----- From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Joe Pluta Sent: Thursday, April 27, 2006 7:55 PM To: 'Midrange Systems Technical Discussion' Subject: The Perpetual Myth of iSeries Obsolescence The iSeries supports pretty much every character set available. Certainly as many as your standard Windows/*nix box. The QSYS library system is the only file system that has the 10 character limit, and that's frankly all a business system needs. Long directory/path structures are needed for text-file-based operating systems that are fconfigured with thousands of little files, as opposed to an OS with an integrated database. But in any case, the iSeries supports long file names just fine in the IFS. The fact that the iSeries supports all those technologies IN ADDITION TO all the technologies offered by other operating systems is a benefit, not a disadvantage. Joe P.S. I should start a cult: The Church of the Perpetual Myth of iSeries Obsolescence. I'd have to rename it every time IBM renamed the box, but that might actually be helpful from a tax (evasion) standpoint. > From: Keith Carpenter > > EBCDIC ? > library/object file system with 10 character names ? > > > Unfortunately, changing these things probably has little ROI. > > > Michael Jacobsen wrote: > >> Where do people get the idea that the iSeries system is so obsolete? > > > > Green screen?
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