I've observed that the new InfoCenter format seems to enjoy a higher velocity of updates, corrections, and amplifications. If you look at the WebSphere Application Server for z/OS InfoCenter, for example, there are date stamps on certain pages within the past month. The InfoCenter format has been spreading to many products. I see CICS, MQ, DB2, DB2 tools, AD/PD tools (like File Manager, Fault Analyzer, etc.) -- I think all the major products and a fair number of the less common products have InfoCenter coverage now. I see pages in the CICS Transaction Server V3.2 InfoCenter that were updated within the past month, to pick another example.
You can place the InfoCenters on the mainframe and serve them right from there, so that's a nice plus, especially for your disaster recovery needs when you probably need documentation the most. I think there's a certain training company that can show you how if you haven't figured it out. :-) - - - - - Timothy Sipples IBM Consulting Enterprise Software Architect Specializing in Software Architectures Related to System z Based in Tokyo, Serving IBM Japan and IBM Asia-Pacific E-Mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions, send email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the message: GET IBM-MAIN INFO Search the archives at http://bama.ua.edu/archives/ibm-main.html

