|
Hi Nathan.... If the companies strategic direction is platform independance, there may a lot for good reasons. Ability to change hardware vendors, for one. Or wanting to take advantage of newer technology. Perhaps the organization has chosen Unix and is phasing out the 400. Dumb? maybe. Difficult, certainly, but if I can show a significant cost savings through consolidating to a few central boxes v. distributed, heterogeneous machines, guess who gets the project. What if I were a software company that had an application that would run on multiple platforms? Take SAP, for example. It runs on Unix, Alpha, even a 400. Wouldn't you want platform independance? Why support multiple versions of the system when you can run them on *any* platform? Cost savings? You bet! Say the next big thing hits the hardware market. Intel creates the Grizmo 9000, which revolutionizes the industry. Only one small catch: no backward compatibility at all. Once the JVM is written, however, your company is on-board, selling millions of units because none of your competitors can touch your speed-to-market. I realize this is a midrange AS/400 forum. I love the 400 but to assume it's going to be around forever is like an ostrich, hiding it's head in the sand. Smart shops are looking to be nimble, to have the ability to react quickly to changing business needs, and deliver solutions in a timely, efficent manner. As you can see, the decision to ensure platform independance is not arbitrary. I encourge solutions that are not AS/400 centric so I can migrate off the box, if neccessary. Looking at the other boxes at Honeywell, it may be necessary. dan -----Original Message----- From: Nathan M. Andelin [mailto:nandelin@RELATIONAL-DATA.COM] Sent: Monday, July 15, 2002 4:47 PM To: web400@midrange.com Subject: Re: [WEB400] Re: Resort back to RPG? > From: "Joel R. Cochran" <jrc@masi-brac.com> > I need to be platform independent and I need to > get there in a hurry. Joel, Why does your application need to be platform independent? And if the answer is because the boss says so, why does the boss need it? Just curious, I am. Have you even known of any database business application of substantial scope that was platform independent? Is there such a thing? The moment that an application generates a spool file, or uses a data queue, or calls a system API, or incorporates a CL command, it's no longer independent.
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
This mailing list archive is Copyright 1997-2024 by midrange.com and David Gibbs as a compilation work. Use of the archive is restricted to research of a business or technical nature. Any other uses are prohibited. Full details are available on our policy page. If you have questions about this, please contact [javascript protected email address].
Operating expenses for this site are earned using the Amazon Associate program and Google Adsense.