Re: IBM-MAIN Digest - 24 Feb 2018 to 25 Feb 2018 (#2018-56)

2018-02-25 Thread Aileen Wynne (WIPRO)
Kind regards, Aileen Aileen Wynne, Mainframe Systems Services (In Partnership with Wipro) Ext 878617 |(+353) 01- 4878617 | Mobile (+353) 087 4158724 5th Floor, B, Alexandra House, Wipro Limited, 3 Ballsbridge Park, Merrion Road, Dublin 4 GSE Annual Conference

Re: macbook air and keyboard emulation

2018-02-25 Thread Martin Packer
Went I “nuked and paved” my Mac a couple of weeks ago I had to remember to do just that: Trying to scroll right in SDSF left me scratching my head until I did. :-) I would add that I bought an external keypad, which helps a little. (Though actually I’m mostly using it - via the wonderful

Re: macbook air and keyboard emulation

2018-02-25 Thread Ross Biddulph
Hi Itschak, If it's just F11 and F12 you are having problems with it may be that the Mac OS X keyboard shortcuts have hijacked them. Try going into the Mac OS X System preferences -> Keyboard -> Shortcuts. On the left hand side click on Mission Control and if it has F11 & F12 checked for show

Re: Timer Unis (was: ... time change ...)

2018-02-25 Thread Bill Godfrey
On Fri, 23 Feb 2018 23:32:07 -0500, Tony Harminc wrote: >On 23 February 2018 at 19:16, Paul Gilmartin < >000433f07816-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu> wrote: > >> But now I'm confused. The description of TIMER says: >> For TUINTVL, the address is a fullword containing the time interval. >>

Re: Product license key program

2018-02-25 Thread Charles Mills
As the author of such software, let me confirm what others have said: each vendor does things its own way -- or perhaps not at all. CA has a central "server" program for administering licenses; the software I am responsible for has the licensing embedded in the program itself. The exact

Re: Product license key program

2018-02-25 Thread Lizette Koehler
As far as I know each vendor has their own process for determining when a product will no longer function on a given LPAR. The function could be a key with a date/time in it. They could rely on the customer to renew and then they get a new key. If not, then the product could expire but

Re: Product license key program

2018-02-25 Thread ITschak Mugzach
This is a program a vendor develop to protect his ip. It can be cpu serial limited, model or time. If your interest is time, just compare machine time with a value in your program. Stck (or $stck macro) will store the clock value. ITschak בתאריך 25 בפבר׳ 2018 1:54 אחה״צ,‏ "Peter"

Re: Product license key program

2018-02-25 Thread Peter
Generally which assembler macro or program sets the expiration ? On 25-Feb-2018 5:07 PM, "Mike Schwab" wrote: > Generally, part of the start up of each product. CA has a common > repository that is checked at start up. > > On Sun, Feb 25, 2018 at 4:50 AM, Peter

Re: macbook air and keyboard emulation

2018-02-25 Thread David Boyes
That’s completely up to the emulator software to decide. There is no reference standard since Apple has used so many different physical keyboard layouts over the years. Just imagine what it would look like on a keyboard configured for Mandarin, and you start to get the picture. Or for a user

Re: Product license key program

2018-02-25 Thread Mike Schwab
Generally, part of the start up of each product. CA has a common repository that is checked at start up. On Sun, Feb 25, 2018 at 4:50 AM, Peter wrote: > Hi > > How does the product license key works. Which program determines the > expiration of a product. > > This is a

Product license key program

2018-02-25 Thread Peter
Hi How does the product license key works. Which program determines the expiration of a product. This is a general question. Peter -- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions, send email to

Re: macbook air and keyboard emulation

2018-02-25 Thread ITschak Mugzach
​I am using several of them... PCOMM, x3270, Rumba and more. It depends on what the client is using. The idea is to have a script that match the mac keyboard with PC keyboard. ITschak​ On Sun, Feb 25, 2018 at 10:42 AM, Gadi Ben-Avi wrote: > It probably depends on the

Re: macbook air and keyboard emulation

2018-02-25 Thread Gadi Ben-Avi
It probably depends on the emulation you are using. -Original Message- From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU] On Behalf Of Itschak Mugzach Sent: Sunday, February 25, 2018 10:22 AM To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU Subject: macbook air and keyboard emulation

macbook air and keyboard emulation

2018-02-25 Thread Itschak Mugzach
Hello Mac users... I am using macbook to connect to our (and client's) mainframes. I do not want to change the keyboard map in the emulation product. what is the keyboard mapping for enter, ph11 and pf12? ITschak -- *| **Itschak Mugzach | Director | SecuriTeam Software **|** IronSphere