Title: search400.com - Today's News: The top iSeries headlines, trends and technical advice
An e-newsletter published by Search400.com 
 February 04, 2004 >> Receive this e-mail as text   >> About this e-mail 
ISSUE SPONSORED BY:
>>  Sun Microsystems: Sun's quarterly Web event-Network Computing 04-Q1 is coming soon!
 Today's Highlights  

>>  LEAD STORY:  Oracle ups the ante for PeopleSoft
>>  NEWS:  Top PC/Windows connectivity solutions
>>  WEBCAST PREMIERE:  RPG skills for the new millennium
>>  THE MISSING LINK:  Booble puts the 'ogle' in 'Google'
 News and Top Stories  

LEAD STORY
Oracle ups the ante for PeopleSoft  (SearchCRM.com)
Oracle Corp. is now offering investors $26 per share -- more than an 18% premium over the stock's closing price on Tuesday.
More on this topic:
JDE acquisition concerns could fizzle for users
SPONSORED BY: Sun Microsystems

Sun's quarterly Web event-Network Computing 04-Q1 is coming soon! On February 10-11, Sun will unveil over 20 innovations designed to cut cost and complexity. Join the live chat at 12 p.m. (PST) on February 11 and ask Sun executives your toughest network computing questions. Get a free Sun Java Desktop System demo CD and more when you attend the event and sign up for a community program. Catch it all! Sign up for an e-mail reminder.

Join the live chat
NEWS
Top PC/Windows connectivity solutions (Search400.com)
There are many reasons for wanting to connect to your iSeries -- and many methods to do so. Whether you need to get data to wireless devices, want an alternative to a network of PCs or need to access non-native files from the iSeries, these products from Search400.com's Products of the Year awards do the trick.

DAILY HEADLINES
All headlines, including those below, are available from our news page.
  > Top performance-monitoring/management tools (Search400.com)
  > Oracle 10g ships with new price tag (SearchOracle.com)
 VIEW ALL NEWS AND TOP STORIES

 Announcements & Links  


FORUM ADVICE
Verifying BRMS information
"Ditadm" is looking for a way to verify that the BRMS information across his system is synchronized. Do you know how to compare the media information?
>>  Participate in this discussion thread


EXPERT ADVICE
Restricting break messages
Ken Graap, OS/400 advice

Dear Ken,
We want to restrict break messages from being sent by users. We'd like to do this by using either the SNDBRKMSG command or the CALL QEZSNDMG command. One way would be to have *EXCLUDE for PUBLIC on these commands/programs. However, we would prefer to have an option by means of which a user can inhibit such messages from breaking on his screen.
>>  View Ken's response


WEBCAST PREMIERE
RPG skills for the new millennium
Date: Tuesday, Feb. 10, 9 a.m. EST (14:00 GMT)
Speaker: Paul Tuohy, CEO of ComCon and author of Re-Engineering RPG Legacy Applications

Join us as RPG programming guru Paul Tuohy outlines what is needed to prepare applications for the modern era. Learn what the programming requirements are as you move away from "green screen" and how RPG fits in.
>>  Listen to broadcast


EXPERT PROFILE
Shahar Mor, PC/Windows connectivity expert
Shahar Mor is president of Barmor Information Systems and has worked on the iSeries for 16 years. He started as a system administrator responsible for security, performance, database administration, backup and recovery procedures and connectivity issues. He later became a senior programmer at a bank and then head of infrastructure for an insurance company. Shahar now has his own consulting firm in Israel, with eight people working for him, doing projects for the iSeries in the network environment. He also has written a Redbook for IBM on iSeries e-commerce.

If you're having connectivity problems, Shahar can help. Send him your questions on PC/Windows connectivity.

>>  Ask Shahar a question or to read recent Q&As


USER POLL
Vote now
Which Democratic presidential candidate do you believe would best protect U.S. IT workers?
>>  Sound off! What do you think about this poll? Let us know



THE MISSING LINK
Booble puts the 'ogle' in 'Google'

If Google were the NFL, then Booble would be Janet Jackson. The ubiquitous search engine company is steaming mad that Booble, a search engine that finds adult material, has turned Google's household name into a pornographic parody. Google wants Booble to find a name and a look that aren't ?pornified? versions of Google's. Perhaps "LookSmut" instead of LookSmart or "Ask Sleaze" instead of Ask Jeeves. Booble is undaunted by the gaggle of Google lawyers working to burst Booble's bubble. "Only a lawyer could say 'Booble' without smiling," said a representative.

Recent missing link stories you may enjoy.




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