In <[email protected]>, on 08/27/2012
   at 05:36 PM, CM Poncelet <[email protected]> said:

>Well ... subject to interpretation. For example, DOS was a lot closer
>to  the *original* (pre-ESA) ISPF than Microsoft Windows ever was

Neither looked anything like ISPF, or even like the original SPF.

>The purpose of ESA was to allow IBM to take control of MVS systems 
>and prevent sysprogs from 'zapping  out' their inefficencies in 
>order to improve performance.

OCO started well before ESA. I've never seen any evidence that the
purpose for ESA was anything other than VSCR.

>But, sure, ISPF was/is a great improvement on native TSO editing
>etc.  ('edlin' was it, or am I losing track?

You're losing track; EDLIN was a PC editor.

>However, I would most strongly advise you to *avoid* choosing the
>easy  options (mouse-pushing, Ctrl+Alt+Delete etc.) as offered in
>Windows -  and be, instead, familiar with reading (and, if possible,
>with writing) machine code.

What do you have against assemblers?

>you realize that Intel processors soon run out of available OP 
>codes. So the next Intel 'solution' is to produce dual-core and now,
>I  believe, quad-core processors.

Multi-core chips have nothing to do with running out of opcodes.

-- 
     Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz, SysProg and JOAT
     Atid/2        <http://patriot.net/~shmuel>
We don't care. We don't have to care, we're Congress.
(S877: The Shut up and Eat Your spam act of 2003)

----------------------------------------------------------------------
For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions,
send email to [email protected] with the message: INFO IBM-MAIN

Reply via email to