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Apparently I touched a nerve. I'll just be quiet and continue dooming the existence of the machines. By the way, if we're wanting to 'live in the now,' you (and everyone else for that matter) should probably start calling them iSeries, which is what all new boxes coming off the line are labeled. If anything makes them seem antiquated, it's people continuing to call them by their 1988 name. jch -----Original Message----- From: Joe Pluta [mailto:joepluta@PlutaBrothers.com] Sent: Friday, December 13, 2002 11:17 AM To: midrange-l@midrange.com Subject: RE: Lower End AS/400s > From: Justin Haase > > Easy killer, I was just saying that nothing is perfect. I like > OS/400 too. No, actually, I'd rather not take it easy. It's just that sort of attitude that has gotten us into the straits we're in. By not standing up for our jobs, for our platform, for our users, by not putting our collective feet down and DEMANDING that IT management take into account TCO, reliability and all the other things that make the AS/400 so powerful, we have instead implicitly encouraged the proliferation of error-prone networks of cheap, inferior machines. Guilt by omission can be every bit as damaging as guilt by commission, and we're living proof of that as we reap the results of the "let it be" attitude of the last decade or so. People with no IT experience are making IT decisions. People who don't understand the cost benefits of data processing are assessing the value of what we do. Nobody is standing up for the end user, or for reliability, or for stability, or for legacy reuse. And those of us who know these things, we're sitting around with our thumbs strategically positioned while we whine that there's nothing we can do. "Easy killer"? Heck no, it ain't me killing the box. I'm out there, every day, shouting to whomever I can get to listen that the AS/400 is BETTER than Windows, BETTER than Unix, BETTER than any other platform. I can prove it, and I will to anyone who is willing to make the effort to listen. Unfortunately, most people have spent the last decade taking it easy, and this is where THAT particular attitude has led us. You want to take it easy? Go ahead. But don't later complain about how IT management isn't making the right decisions. They aren't because you're not telling them what the right decisions are. You're taking it easy. Which one of is is killing the box? Joe _______________________________________________ This is the Midrange Systems Technical Discussion (MIDRANGE-L) mailing list To post a message email: MIDRANGE-L@midrange.com To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/cgi-bin/listinfo/midrange-l or email: MIDRANGE-L-request@midrange.com Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/midrange-l.
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