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That's why I said: "You're saying that green screen is perceived as obsolete -- graphical means new. I don't disagree that people feel that way. It is, however, pretty dumb." I do think it's ironic that the platform is perceived as obsolete because it hasn't forced its apps into obsolescence. I do think it's ironic that other platforms have been perceived as modern because they have forced previous iterations into obsolescence. Retire the old user interface, amputate the old applications, and folks might actually see the enhancements. The stability and backwards compatibility is not a separate issue from the perceived obsolescence -- my point is that there's a relationship between them. -----Original Message----- From: midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Chris Payne Sent: Friday, April 28, 2006 12:53 PM To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion Subject: RE: The Perpetual Myth of iSeries Obsolescence Jim, The reason the AS/400 is still around is because it is a stable platform and you don't have to constantly port the applications from VB to coldfusion to dot.net, which means that there is a good business case for using the machine. That however is a separate issue from why the system is perceived as obsolete by people who don't work with it every day. Because they don't know about all of its wonderful features, they look at the user interface and say "That looks like it was created in the early 80's it must be OLD"
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