Title: search390.com - Today's News: Headlines, trends and expert advice for enterprise systems users
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| FEATURED TIP |
| A cool CICS advantage (Search390.com) |
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Years ago Texas Instruments had an MSDOS product known affectionately as Information Engineering Facility (IEF). Later it was known as IEF/Composer and provided a multi-platform cross-development environment allowing allegedly high level UML (universal modeling language) modeling of applications and components. It was part of a trend called Component Based Development (CBD). Sterling Software acquired the product and renamed it Cool:GEN. Later Computer Associates inhaled Sterling Software and renamed the product Advantage??? The product developed applications on many platforms, but on OS/390, the target of choice was CICS.
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SPONSORED BY: Search390.com's Career Center
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How does your salary compare to those of your peers? Visit Search390.com's new Career Center powered by Dice and take our salary survey. You'll find training, certification and resume resources along with over 27,000 IT job openings to search through. Register now and receive e-mails when a listing matches your search criteria, have your profile automatically sent to Dice.com member companies, access a host of career resources and tips and much more!
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Jumpstart your career with Search390.com
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NEWS
IBM raises SMB ante with DB2 content manager offering (SearchDatabase.com)
Content is king and IBM has its sights on being king of content with a slew of offerings including an "express" version of its DB2 Content Manager system and DB2 Content Manager for Linux.
DAILY HEADLINES
All headlines, including those below, are available from our news page.
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FEATURED TOPIC
The debate over H-1B visas
Get up to speed on controversial H-1B visa legislation with this collection of articles.
FEATURED EXPERT
Dr. David Boyes, Linux on the mainframe
Dr. David Boyes will answer all of your Linux on the mainframe questions and show you how to make multiple Linux images "dance" on a single machine.
THE MISSING LINK
New online site uses animal magnetism
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Maybe you love dogs, but you don't want to date one. Or perhaps the last guy you went out with was a pure pig, but that didn't dull your desire for a pot-bellied piglet. If love means never having to say, "It's me or the mastiff," then get thee to www.kissykat.com. It's a new online dating service that uses pets as the main matchmaking metric. If you sign up with KissyKat, you don't just put down "smoker," "non-smoker" or "could lose a few pounds." You also specify what kind of pet you have, what kinds you like and which ones you can't live with. Among the leisure activities you can pick for your profile? "Breeding" (referring to pets, ostensibly) and "animal husbandry." (AFP)
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