|
Bob,critical
Can't agree more. However, Aaron's last paragraph points to a
issue for me. As I have said repeatedly the enemy of the System iright
now is IBM's software group. They are killing us.views
Michael Crump
Manager, Computing Services
Saint-Gobain Containers, Inc.
1509 S. Macedonia Ave.
Muncie, IN 47302
765.741.7696
765.741.7012 f
No combat ready unit has ever passed inspection.
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-----Original Message-----
From: web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Bob Cancilla
Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2007 1:48 PM
To: Web Enabling the AS400 / iSeries
Subject: Re: [WEB400] The Truth About EGL
Aaron,
Something many people often overlook is the simple fact that
ofbetween
what language you use to develop in, the total cost of owning an i5
machine
is dramatically lower than alternatives. As a customer running
4up
and six i5 machines with a staff over 27 developers we had one person
devoting less than 1/3 of his time to i5 administration. Our Windows
group
grew from 2 people to over 20 people. As AIX was introduced we ended
with 4 people providing administrative support.thing
As I look out on the i5 community as an IBM'r with a much broader view
point
I see customers who have ZERO dedicated administrators. The darn
justapplications
runs itself. Many i5 customers running 3rd party ISV based
have absolutely no technical support on site and rarely needassistance
withpeople
the machine. It just sits there and runs.
Not only is the TCO extremely low what other platform allows you to
start
out with a model 515 and scale all the way up to a 595 with no changes
in
your applications or environment or add new staff to support growth?
It is quite simply an awesome platform. Many of the reasons that
give for moving to other languages are not technically oriented butare
apotentially
matter of satisfying themselves for numerous reasons that they are
protecting their company's investment in software.
On Dec 18, 2007 7:46 AM, Aaron Bartell <albartell@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Thanks for posting Bob. Based on your last comment:modern
<Bob>IBM's position is clear, we offer two very distinct paths to
Weband
development: Java and EGL. The System i is computer platform that
supports
many other alternatives and those choices are also available to our
customers. We hope customers choose the IBM path...</Bob>
It appears as though there is awkward alignment between the software
hardware divisions, because Java/EGL carry a mantra of platformlooking
independence. What does System i hardware offer the shop that is
to
move on from RPG and lessen costs overall (i.e. moving to
moreto
effiecient development with EGL and moving their application stack
a[mailto:web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
highintriguing -
powered, less expensive, Wintel/Linux server).
Being that the applications are running in an OS agnostic app server
(WAS/Tomcat/Geronimo/etc), and being that those app servers don't
necessary
have any intimate connections to the OS/DB that would make it
why would you envision people staying on System i5 hardware?division
Maybe a better question to ask would be, how is the IBM software
helping to sell *new* System i5 hardware to *new* customers? Onething I
could see as a benefit is the ability to have many LPARs that are
scaleable
past what an Enterprise Wintel machine can support.
Aaron Bartell
http://mowyourlawn.com
-----Original Message-----
From: web400-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx
Onis
Behalf Of Bob Cancilla
Sent: Tuesday, December 18, 2007 9:25 AM
To: Web Enabling the AS400 / iSeries
Subject: Re: [WEB400] The Truth About EGL
Trevor,
The facts are the facts. We have a significant population of RPG
developers
and customers have a huge inventory of RPG applications. RPG has a
healthy
future for at least 10 years. I cannot see beyond that point. It
alsoother
abulk
fact that we are seeing a major decline in RPG programmers with the
of
the population nearing retirement age and very few new young people
entering
the population. This is not my view point, look at Gartner and
Januaryanalysts. Can we turn this around? Should we turn this around? Ican
assure you that IBM and I myself are committed to insuring that weprotect
our customer's investment in RPG and that is a fact. We are takingsome
specific steps to insure that we can provide that investmentprotection on
an ongoing basis. I will talk much more about this after our
iannouncement when I am free to talk about our repackaging of System
thetoolsmarket
and compilers.
Trevor I do not know the future of RPG. I see what I see in the
which is a decline in the number of programmers and an increase in
forthnumber of customers asking us to help them migrate to othertechnologies.
You can absolutely be assured that as long as customers continue touse
RPGRPG,
and want to use it, that we will support and enhance it.
As far as EGL goes, I think folks should begin to use it along with
notWeb
in place of. I've looked carefully at the requests for an RPG based
UI
and feel that EGL meets the requirements that customers have set
inmust
this area. There certainly was elegance and simplicity in onelanguage
thatthat
could do it all and that is also a fact. Unfortunately I do not see
day coming back anytime soon. I think it is now a time where you
IBMpick
multiple tools to get the job done. EGL is one choice, it is the
andrecommended strategic choice. There are most definitely alternative
solutions available today from other vendors and/or the open source
community.
Choices are based on our customers budgets, staffing constraints,
sayingdemands of the business as well as the customer's tolerance of risk.
IBM's
position is clear, we offer two very distinct paths to modern Web
development: Java and EGL. The System i is computer platform that
supports
many other alternatives and those choices are also available to our
customers. We hope customers choose the IBM path...
On Dec 18, 2007 6:41 AM, Trevor Perry <trevor@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Bob,
This paragraph is the reason why people consider that you are
RPGfor
is
dead. While you may not use the words, your intent is clear.
Out here in the real world, customers are not universally asking
extendtheirmigration from RPG. There are many customers who wish to leverage
investment in RPG and their staff, and would love to see you
RPGwrote:
IBM.beyond a green screen language.weekend.
And, btw, thanks for your offlist reply to my question from this
I
appreciate your consideration, and I appreciate you speaking for
Trevor
On 12/18/07 9:24 AM, "Bob Cancilla" <bob.cancilla@xxxxxxxxx>
(20'sbeen
Look RPG is an outstanding language and better than it has ever
atbeyond,
the
V5R4 level of the language and will be even better at V6R1 and
orbut
facts are facts. It is an old language and no amount of wishing
saidmarketing will turn it into a popular modern language. RPG as I
howeverbefore
has at least a strong 10 year life, maybe much longer. It is
on
the
decline. Just look around your shop. How many young people
orfor
even
30's) do you have in the shop? Who is teaching RPG? or COBOL
that
matter.
--
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Bob Cancilla
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IBM Rational Tools System i/z Strategy/Enablement
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Bob Cancilla
System i Software Evangelist
IBM Rational Tools System i/z Strategy/Enablement
email: rcancill@xxxxxxxxxx
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