I could not agree more.
Jim W Grant
Senior VP, Chief Information Officer
Web: www.pdpgroupinc.com
From: Jim Oberholtzer <midrangel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "'Midrange Systems Technical Discussion'"
<midrange-l@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: 12/20/2016 09:41 AM
Subject: RE: V7R1 is not supported anymore (at least for SSL
ciphers)
Sent by: "MIDRANGE-L" <midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
The other reason folks don't upgrade as fast as you (and I would) like
them
to is regulatory requirements. Often times the regulators require actions
no sane person would consider and that slows the entire process down. If
you have the SEC or Banks to worry about then your ability to upgrade
becomes significantly more difficult.
Now add in little things like the ciphers, SMB2, and a few other small but
deadly landmines and you have a more difficult series of decisions to make
and actions to take.
And like Larry said, those of us that do these all the time remember all
the
landmines we've already stepped on and avoid them. Folks that do it once
every three years tend to step on the same ones year after year.
-----Original Message-----
From: MIDRANGE-L [mailto:midrange-l-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of
DrFranken
Sent: Tuesday, December 20, 2016 8:30 AM
To: Midrange Systems Technical Discussion
Subject: Re: V7R1 is not supported anymore (at least for SSL ciphers)
Maybe if they really want folks to upgrade OS versions more often >
they'd make it easier and much less expensive.
Well it's already free so that's off the table. Unless you have no support
that is in which case it's 'unobtanium' so you're stuck.
Of course there are the odd vendors who want $$$$ for a key for the new
version that supports release +1. That's both stupid (as long as you're on
support with them) and not on IBM.
As to easy that's a matter of opinion. I think it's very straightforward,
even easy, and I know several on the list that would agree with that.
However for many it's like me changing the starter on my Son's car. I
could
describe the process in detail. I know the tools required, the approximate
time line, and parts needed. I could not, ore more likely WOULD not
attempt
that work on my own. Just No. Too many things could go wrong for the few
dollars I'd save by not having a processional do it.
And just like an IBM i upgrade I hope to do it infrequently and I would
forget things by the next time I need to do so.
- Larry "DrFranken" Bolhuis
www.Frankeni.com
www.iDevCloud.com - Personal Development IBM i timeshare service.
www.iInTheCloud.com - Commercial IBM i Cloud Hosting.
On 12/20/2016 9:19 AM, Bradley Stone wrote:
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