What would it take to have documentation, etc., updated to reflect the
current name of z/OS?
Also, even though there are no longer any users, what is the BS2000/OSD
status? It is also EBCDIC. The only other EBCDIC platforms still
outstanding are the Unisys OS2200 operating system and IBM's System i
(formerly known as AS/400). I'm pretty sure that Perl was never ported
to AS/400, and I believe it was also never ported to OS2000. (Unisys MCP
is ASCII.)
On 2015-03-23 12:22, Karl Nordstrom wrote:
/http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/z/os/zos/support/zos_eos_dates.html/
/
/
/OS/390 V2/
Program
number VRM Announced Available Marketing
withdrawn Service discontinued
5647-A01 2.10.0 2000/05/16 2000/09/29 2002/12/17
2004/09/30
5647-A01 2.09.0 2000/02/29 2000/03/31 2000/09/14
2003/03/31
5647-A01 2.08.0 1999/02/22 1999/09/24 2000/03/16
2002/09/30
5647-A01 2.07.0 1998/08/18 1999/03/26 1999/09/09
2002/03/31
5647-A01 2.06.0 1998/02/24 1998/09/25 2000/06/15
2002/03/31
5647-A01 2.05.0 1997/09/09 1998/03/27 1998/09/03
2001/03/31
5647-A01 2.04.0 1997/09/09 1997/09/26 1998/03/12
2001/03/31
--
M. Ray Mullins
Roseville, CA, USA
http://www.catherdersoftware.com/
http://www.z390.org/
German is essentially a form of assembly language consisting entirely of far
calls heavily accented with throaty guttural sounds. ---ilvi
French is essentially German with messed-up pronunciation and spelling.
--Robert B Wilson
English is essentially French converted to 7-bit ASCII. ---Christophe Pierret
[for Alain LaBonté]