I cheer when an IBM i solution wins a competitive battle and I'm blue when
it goes the other way. I wish I could help more. I found the
https://powerhub.com/ link too, but was unsure if you were competing
against that (a suite of applications). Also, it wasn't clear whether the
competition might be between building vs.buying a product.


On Sat, Feb 1, 2020 at 9:31 AM Jay Vaughn <jeffersonvaughn@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

i'm fairly confident that is not it - but i will go find an online resource
and post it - curious myself!

jay

On Sat, Feb 1, 2020 at 4:40 AM Jack Kingsley <iseriesflorida@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

Is this it.
https://powerhub.com/


On Sat, Feb 1, 2020 at 4:36 AM Jack Kingsley <iseriesflorida@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

Jay, can you post the powerhub software link.

On Fri, Jan 31, 2020 at 1:21 PM Jay Vaughn <jeffersonvaughn@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

Thanks Steve.

That is one thing that crossed my mind is the security aspect but that
hasn’t been mentioned. Only cost.

The way I see it is they are adding an unnecessary layer of complexity
over the i to compensate for their lack of knowledge with what all
the i
can do.

And at this point probably won’t divert a different way even if the
argument is strong enough.

Another thing I found odd they are doing...
A year ago I was tasked with developing an “inbound file monitor
application” on the i to process incoming files. Powerhub side would
be
developed to support a custom MFT process to exchange files via sftp
between our clients and vendor on our hosted system.
A year later I ended up designing, architecting, developing the entire
MFT process on the i. Something I am proud of. It is now in production
serving our clients nicely.
But now that same “leadership” is probing me for info on how I did
things
because they are developing the same thing on powerhub now.
My system is in its infancy and working fantastic.
I just don’t understand their motives sometimes.

Jay


Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 31, 2020, at 12:49 PM, Steve Richter <
stephenrichter@xxxxxxxxx

wrote:

an advantage of powerHub on a separate system is to limit your
hacker
footprint. powerHub might copy a few IBM i tables back and forth
between
the two system. customers who access powerHub only get access to
that
set
of data.

compare to an IWS or PHP. IBM i libraries tend to be very large.
AP,
AR
and warehouse tables in the same library. Using PHP you use
db2_connect to
connect to the database - library. Once that connection is made the
PHP
code typically has access to every table in that library.


On Fri, Jan 31, 2020 at 11:32 AM Jay Vaughn <
jeffersonvaughn@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:

Maybe they are referring to the costs of me (and my skillset as an
ibm
i
developer)??? Vs outsourced java programming on powerhub?

Jay

Sent from my iPhone

On Jan 31, 2020, at 11:05 AM, Jay Vaughn <
jeffersonvaughn@xxxxxxxxx

wrote:

so our shop is an old traditional rpg shop supporting a fairly
large
mostly green screen product.
it has a crappy screen scraping GUI on it I won't get into.

though we do have a hosted version in a SAAS model.

Our "senior IT leadership" is not of a mainframe/midrange
background.

Our company recently started doing webservices for our clients,
using
powerhub (and I'm not sure what else), but I do THINK it could be
more
efficiently integrated right into our IBM i applications and
database
with
the use of say IWS (or a http web server) and using RPG/yAJL. I've
done it
before at other shops.

So when I presented them (senior leadership) with this link...




https://www.ibmsystemsmag.com/Power-Systems/01/2020/rest-and-sql?utm_content=112727421&utm_medium=social&utm_source=linkedin&hss_channel=lcp-6225

and a comment from me saying...
"I know powerhub is all the rage but the i and your existing IBM i
talent can do it all."

they responded with...

"Yep, but the cost is much more than a cheap Linux OS running it
on
a
PC
with a 10 year-old processor and low memory! Also this way it works
with
ProductABC too! ;-) "

and

"while i truly am an i advocate in this case I have to agree with
him
... heck I'm running Linux on a 15 year old Pc with no problems ...
using
linux makes it easy to add additional virtual or physical servers
and
do
load balancing across the server pool ... "

I replied with...
"You guys certainly know your hardware better than I... but I
don't
see
where hardware even comes into the picture.
You simply configure a web services server on the current hosted
IBM
i.
Now our IBM i apps and IBM ilocal webservices (written in RPGLE or
SQL) can
be invoked via http, directly on the i with programming by i
developers who
know the database and programming already. I've proofed this out
before
and had a working model on our DEV server once upon a time.
What cost? And... this way works with anything able to consume or
provide a REST webservice. We can return any modern
data-interchange
format (xml, json)."


so, i'd like to hear the opinions on this board. I know what the
i
can
do, but I'm not sure what exactly they are talking about. Can
anyone
weigh
in on what they seem to be dead set on and what cost they are
referring to?

tia

Jay

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