Good thought. Look into Open Access for RPG and then, if still interested,
you may want to contact a vendor like looksoftware who is providing handlers
to deliver the data stream as XML.

Pete Isaksson
petei@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Business Development Mgr
www.looksoftware.com
+1 678 494-5465 office
+1 678 662-2400 cell


-----Original Message-----
From: web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of JDHorn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Friday, September 17, 2010 10:42 AM
To: web400@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: [WEB400] IBM i GUI Frameworks

I'm a babe in the woods at this kind of thing - but -

since the 5250 data stream is probably stable and not being enhanced or
changed at all, couldn't ibm quite easily have an option, maybe an hspec or
fspec option, to write and read the 5250 data stream as xml?


Jim Horn

____________________________________________________



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Date: 09/16/2010 03:46PM
Subject: WEB400 Digest, Vol 8, Issue 300

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Today's Topics:

1. Re: IBM i GUI Frameworks (Mike Wills)
2. Re: IBM i GUI Frameworks (Booth Martin)
3. Re: IBM i GUI Frameworks (Thorbjoern Ravn Andersen)
4. Re: IBM i GUI Frameworks (Mike Wills)
5. Re: IBM i GUI Frameworks (Aaron Bartell)
6. Re: IBM i GUI Frameworks (Pete Helgren)
7. Re: IBM i GUI Frameworks (Mike Wills)
8. Re: IBM i GUI Frameworks (Nathan Andelin)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

message: 1
date: Thu, 16 Sep 2010 12:05:31 -0500
from: Mike Wills <mike@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
subject: Re: [WEB400] IBM i GUI Frameworks

What the open source application library people does is give options. A
person may hear there is a way to "freshen up" their RPG programs easily
with a web interface. For little investment (only their time) they
can experiment and maybe eventually push live a web version of their
application. These people would never buy a commercial application because
management may not see any value in such a purchase. RPGUI and powerEXT (and
others) allow that developer to play in his down time with something new.
Now, that may lead them to buying a commercial product (with paid support)
in the future or to just "stay the course" on the framework they choose.

Now a smart businessperson would look at something like this and figure out
how to profit off an open framework. Maybe provide support for it. Do
consulting based on your expertise in the framework. Maybe take it to the
next level any make it easier to use, or just build a better product with a
migration path from the open framework. There are ways to make money on
free.

While licensing types is a valid subject, I don't feel that
is appropriate here (and frankly, I am getting tired of it). That should be
taken to the project forums of concern and be relevant to the projects
goals. The original question was about why the three projects don't work
together. Let's keep it to that, please.

This is my only 2 cents on the subject.

--
Mike Wills
http://mikewills.info


------------------------------

message: 2
date: Thu, 16 Sep 2010 13:53:30 -0500
from: Booth Martin <booth@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
subject: Re: [WEB400] IBM i GUI Frameworks

I have been hearing the term "crowd sourcing" being used, too. If I am
understanding the idea of it, there is value added with this approach
because a whole crowd of qualified people are ready & willing to get the
pig to snort, thereby shortening development cycles, enhancing
solutions, and broadening the product's adaptability.



On 9/16/2010 12:05 PM, Mike Wills wrote:
What the open source application library people does is give options. A
person may hear there is a way to "freshen up" their RPG programs easily
with a web interface. For little investment (only their time) they
can experiment and maybe eventually push live a web version of their
application. These people would never buy a commercial application because
management may not see any value in such a purchase. RPGUI and powerEXT
(and
others) allow that developer to play in his down time with something new.
Now, that may lead them to buying a commercial product (with paid support)
in the future or to just "stay the course" on the framework they choose.

Now a smart businessperson would look at something like this and figure
out
how to profit off an open framework. Maybe provide support for it. Do
consulting based on your expertise in the framework. Maybe take it to the
next level any make it easier to use, or just build a better product with
a
migration path from the open framework. There are ways to make money on
free.

While licensing types is a valid subject, I don't feel that
is appropriate here (and frankly, I am getting tired of it). That should
be
taken to the project forums of concern and be relevant to the projects
goals. The original question was about why the three projects don't work
together. Let's keep it to that, please.

This is my only 2 cents on the subject.

--
Mike Wills
http://mikewills.info


------------------------------

message: 3
date: Thu, 16 Sep 2010 20:55:21 +0200
from: Thorbjoern Ravn Andersen <ravn@xxxxxxxxxx>
subject: Re: [WEB400] IBM i GUI Frameworks

Den 16/09/10 17.01, Nathan Andelin skrev:
From: Aaron Bartell<aaronbartell@xxxxxxxxx>
Maybe you need to come right out and ask what it is you have
on your mind so we can put this to rest?
I just did ask what what on my mind. But I agree that the questions and
answers
are getting circular. It appears that the best thing for me to do is just
wait
for you to put several thousand more hours into your framework, and have a
half
dozen copy cats incorporate it into their proprietary commercial offerings
without so much as returning to give you the time of day, then see if you
change
your mind about the LGPL. If I understand correctly, that's why the
organizers
of the GNU project are asking contributors to stop using the LGPL. We've
see
the same evolution with Zend licensing.
If you use LGPL (or Mozilla or Apache), it is actually a _success_ if
the software is being used in proprietary commercial offerings.

I still think that the future value of software is not in who uses the
actual bytes, but who need help in doing so. If you have critical mass
in users, the few percent who need help give sufficient income.


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