Re: AT-TLS and CSSMTP setup

2023-07-31 Thread Brian Westerman
so you can use authsmtp.com to send directly from CSSMTP? When you send the email, does it come from where you say it should or do you have to use a special email that they give you? That would be great. I assume they have an smtp server that you set up in the targetname field. Do you know

Re: I have no knowledge

2023-07-31 Thread Jon Perryman
> On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 01:41:36 PM PDT, Tom Brennan > wrote: > The AIU (Integrated Artificial Intelligence Accelerator Unit) is a > portion of each chip in a z16, maybe about 1% of chip real estate, that > contains something they call the "Matrix Compute Array" containing 128 >

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Seymour J Metz
Mostly the same CCW opcodes. ECKD added some and a few obsolete ones are gone. Of course, FBA and FCP are new. Physical volumes are another matter - he's dead, Jim. From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List on behalf of Grant Taylor

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Grant Taylor
On 7/31/23 12:45 PM, Colin Paice wrote: A volume is a convenient picture - they no longer exist on modern DASD. ACK My limited understanding is that the S/360 or S/370 would probably not recognize anything in use today as DASD. The S/390 /might/ see something that vaguely reminds it of

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Bill Johnson
My first job at Packard Electric, we had 2 mainframes, 1 for production, a NAS 9000, and 1 for development, a NAS 6650. Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone On Monday, July 31, 2023, 7:40 PM, Steve Thompson wrote: Something that I read (in one post or another) indicated, to me, that Fujitsu was

Re: [External] : Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Jon Nolting
I actually traveled to Japan to work on an Amdahl machine installed there. We visited the factory where the base machines were built and then sent to Amdahl for their modifications. My time at Amdahl was fantastic. Best technology (PERIOD) and some of the best people I ever worked with. We

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Steve Thompson
Something that I read (in one post or another) indicated, to me, that Fujitsu was buying Amdahl machines. Wasn't pointing fingers. I know that Fujitsu owned 40% of Amdahl in the late 80s when I got hired. It was a sad day when they exercised their right to buy the rest of Amdahl. I lost money

Re: Ignorant z/OS question

2023-07-31 Thread Jon Perryman
> On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 04:04:02 PM PDT, Seymour J Metz > wrote: > I see no reason to repeatedly give the same answer Again with non-answers. I've only asked you to identify the lie in this one Email so how did you repeat an answer you never gave. If you stay out of my way then I will

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Tom Marchant
On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 16:29:22 -0400, Steve Thompson wrote: >Fujitsu did not "buy" Amdahl machines, Phil didn't say that Fujitsu bought Amdahl machines. He said that they bought Amdahl. This is true. >Fujitsu supplied Amdahl with their machines I worked for Amdahl too, from 1978 to 1984. I

Re: Preferred FTP Client for Windows

2023-07-31 Thread Paul Gilmartin
On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 17:16:20 -0500, Kirk Wolf wrote: >Here's the direct URL to the User's Guide: >https://coztoolkit.com/docs/sftp/index.html > >for FILEDATA=Record, here's an example: > >ls /+mode=binary,linerule=L4 > >(There are a number of different linerule options, including rdw, crlf, nl,

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Jon Perryman
The last Fujitsu mainframe is scheduled for 2030 and dropping all support by 2035. Honeywell Bull GCOS and Unisys OS 2200 and MCP are now x86 based. Are these mainframes or are they PCs? On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 08:40:25 AM PDT, Steve Thompson wrote: I just have to throw this in

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Andrew Rowley
On 1/08/2023 12:16 am, Rick Troth wrote: But, again, an automount per user does not necessarily mean a filesystem per user. Agree... but I was specifically talking about a filesystem per user as a bad thing. This seems to have become a common thing on z/OS. -- Andrew Rowley Black Hill

Re: Ignorant z/OS question

2023-07-31 Thread Seymour J Metz
I see no reason to repeatedly give the same answer to a rude and arrogant hypocrite with delusions of adequacy. And yes, I knew that you were a putz. From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List on behalf of Jon Perryman Sent: Monday, July 31, 2023 6:27 PM To:

Re: AT-TLS and CSSMTP setup

2023-07-31 Thread Phil Smith III
Brian Westerman asked: >I think there are 3rd party sites that offer the use of SMTP for forwarding >that I might want to give a try. I've used authsmtp.com for ~20 years. Good folks and it Just Works. When I've had weird issues, they do the analysis and get right back to me, even though it's

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Phil Smith III
Steve Thompson wrote, in part: >Fujitsu did not "buy" Amdahl machines If you were replying to me, note that I didn't say they bought Amdahl machines; I said they bought Amdahl: "Fujitsu agreed to acquire the 58 percent of Amdahl Corporation (including the Canada-based DMR consulting group) that

Re: Ignorant z/OS question

2023-07-31 Thread Jon Perryman
> On Sunday, July 30, 2023 at 03:39:46 PM PDT, Seymour J Metz > wrote: > I'm saying that you are lying about what we disagree about. You said I lied again in that Email. Your non-answer is not an answer. What specifically in that Email is "disagree about" that is a lie? I don't want your

Re: Preferred FTP Client for Windows

2023-07-31 Thread Kirk Wolf
Here's the direct URL to the User's Guide: https://coztoolkit.com/docs/sftp/index.html for FILEDATA=Record, here's an example: ls /+mode=binary,linerule=L4 (There are a number of different linerule options, including rdw, crlf, nl, etc.) Also, if you have Co:Z on both sides, you can use the

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Bill Hitefield
I remember that class. Not from Amdahl though. I took it from IBM. Lots of good information which stayed with you. Another one like that was MVS Performance. We went to 909 3rd Avenue, NYC for that one. Took the train from New Haven. Bill Hitefield Dino-Software Corporation 800.480.DINO

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread P H
Just the z800! Regards Parwez Hamid​ From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List on behalf of Tom Marchant <000a2a8c2020-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu> Sent: 31 July 2023 22:33 To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU Subject: Re: Mainframe Makers WAS: Ars Technica: The

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Mike Schwab
Our site had 3,000 mostly M9s totaling 30 TB. 4 Ess f20 consolidated to two Ess 800 then 1 EMC Max when I retired. On Mon, Jul 31, 2023, 10:46 Grant Taylor < 023065957af1-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu> wrote: > On 7/31/23 6:37 AM, Jay Maynard wrote: > > It's not just CPU power or number of

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Steve Thompson
I had to take the MVS Structure and Flow class as part of my job. It was 2 weeks long and I felt numb after that drink from a fire hose. But what I learned there I have been using ever since anytime I was doing low level programming as a developer. Steve Thompson On 7/31/2023 5:02 PM, Jay

Re: Google has 5,500,000 mainframes WAS: Definition of mainframe?

2023-07-31 Thread Matt Hogstrom
+1000 Matt Hogstrom PGP key 0F143BC1 > On Jul 31, 2023, at 17:08, Tom Brennan wrote: > > Yes, a z16 is actually a mainframe. Why? Because I know it when I see it. -- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Tom Marchant
On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 14:33:26 -0400, Phil Smith III wrote: >I also STR that Fujitsu builds some of IBM's stuff, which doesn't mean >anything much but is sorta interesting, maybe. IIRC it was Hitachi that built the z800 and z890 using IBM chips. -- Tom Marchant

Re: Google has 5,500,000 mainframes WAS: Definition of mainframe?

2023-07-31 Thread Tom Brennan
I don't think you'll ever get a definitive answer, and comparing parts won't help much. My only answer is the same as what Justice Stewart wrote in 1964. Yes, a z16 is actually a mainframe. Why? Because I know it when I see it. On 7/31/2023 12:03 PM, Jon Perryman wrote: > On Monday,

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Jay Maynard
Me too. I learned more in the MVS Internals course I took from Amdahl than any other mainframe class. Really sharp folks. On Mon, Jul 31, 2023, 16:50 Tom Brennan wrote: > I went to some Amdahl MVS internal classes around 1990. The instructors > were probably previous IBMers, and just seemed so

Re: They are *all* dinosaurs

2023-07-31 Thread Rupert Reynolds
Seems very fair to me. I remember Dylan Beattie quoted something similar in one of his talks, and I think he was quoting Douglas Adams. Yes, here it is:- 1. Anything that is in the world when you’re born is normal and ordinary and is just a natural part of the way the world works. 2.

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Tom Brennan
I went to some Amdahl MVS internal classes around 1990. The instructors were probably previous IBMers, and just seemed so relaxed having fun teaching. I had a great couple of weeks and learned tons. On 7/31/2023 1:29 PM, Steve Thompson wrote: And I still think my time at Amdahl was the best

Re: bitmapped displays [was: Definition of mainframe?]

2023-07-31 Thread Rick Troth
wish I knew your email address On 7/31/23 15:32, Grant Taylor wrote: On 7/31/23 11:28 AM, Paul Gilmartin wrote: I trust that you know alternatives.  Will you describe one? As for how I'm using X11, I'm currently typing this reply in Thunderbird (X11 client application) running on a

Re: I have no knowledge

2023-07-31 Thread Tom Brennan
The AIU (Integrated Artificial Intelligence Accelerator Unit) is a portion of each chip in a z16, maybe about 1% of chip real estate, that contains something they call the "Matrix Compute Array" containing 128 "Processor Tiles" (whatever those are). To me, those PT's make it look more like a

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Steve Thompson
Fujitsu did not "buy" Amdahl machines, Fujitsu supplied Amdahl with their machines with the MODs we (yeah, I worked for Amdahl prior to 1990) asked for/needed, and then for instructions we didn't have micro-store for, we used FAM (Fast Assist Mode) which we then emulated instructions (part of

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Radoslaw Skorupka
W dniu 31.07.2023 o 20:33, Phil Smith III pisze: See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amdahl_Corporation#Fujitsu_GS21 - Fujitsu machines are 31-bit, based on the technology they got when they bought Amdahl. I also STR that Fujitsu builds some of IBM's stuff, which doesn't mean anything much but

Re: Google has 5,500,000 mainframes WAS: Definition of mainframe?

2023-07-31 Thread Matt Hogstrom
In conversations with customers today, it’s generally z/OS running on IBM Z hardware. We could start adding in z/VM, TPF, … but z/OS, in my experience, is what industry folks mean when they say mainframe. Good luck trying to find a legal definition, too much nuance. Sometimes analysts will

Re: bitmapped displays [was: Definition of mainframe?]

2023-07-31 Thread Grant Taylor
On 7/31/23 11:28 AM, Paul Gilmartin wrote: I trust that you know alternatives. Will you describe one? As for how I'm using X11, I'm currently typing this reply in Thunderbird (X11 client application) running on a different Linux system than the one that I'm using as the (X11 display)

Re: I have no knowledge

2023-07-31 Thread Jon Perryman
> On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 11:32:59 AM PDT, Steve Beaver > wrote: > I have absolutely no knowledge about AI other that what AI stands for. The current implementation of AI is based on mathematical calculations. Rather than PCs using an FPU, they use graphics cards with GPU for these

Re: I have no knowledge

2023-07-31 Thread Radoslaw Skorupka
W dniu 31.07.2023 o 20:32, Steve Beaver pisze: I have absolutely no knowledge about AI other that what AI stands for. I know there must be a hardware component like a z16 loaded with a Ton of CP's and something like python to do the work and drive the servos, I have no idea what

Re: AT-TLS and CSSMTP setup

2023-07-31 Thread Seymour J Metz
fastmail? From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List on behalf of Brian Westerman Sent: Monday, July 31, 2023 3:20 PM To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU Subject: Re: AT-TLS and CSSMTP setup Hi, Peters directions for setting up the trace were very simple and easy

Re: AT-TLS and CSSMTP setup

2023-07-31 Thread Brian Westerman
Hi, Peters directions for setting up the trace were very simple and easy to follow. It was discovered that I was missing a CA cert that was not called out by the host site. (which he sent me). Now I'm at a stopping place because the webhost site is requiring authentication on each email (as

Re: Google has 5,500,000 mainframes WAS: Definition of mainframe?

2023-07-31 Thread Jon Perryman
Since you can't pick up a Linux cluster and carry it out, is it a mainframe? Each drawer in a z16 can easily be carried so it's not a mainframe?  On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 11:29:21 AM PDT, Steve Thompson wrote: Because you *can* pick it up and carry it? On 7/31/2023 2:12 PM, Jon

Re: Google has 5,500,000 mainframes WAS: Definition of mainframe?

2023-07-31 Thread Jon Perryman
> On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 11:26:15 AM PDT, Tom Brennan > wrote: > Maybe if you told us why you're asking, people could give better answers. In my opinion the only difference between a z16 running z/OS and a Google server is design philosophy and nothing more. z16 running z/OS is vastly

Re: [EXT] Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Phil Smith III
Robert Crawford asked: >Was the 2260 keyboard the one with two, count 'em, two PF keys? .which reminds me of my favorite bit of IBM trivia: What IBM device had exactly *13* PF keys? -- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff /

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Phil Smith III
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amdahl_Corporation#Fujitsu_GS21 - Fujitsu machines are 31-bit, based on the technology they got when they bought Amdahl. I also STR that Fujitsu builds some of IBM's stuff, which doesn't mean anything much but is sorta interesting, maybe. If you google

I have no knowledge

2023-07-31 Thread Steve Beaver
I have absolutely no knowledge about AI other that what AI stands for. I know there must be a hardware component like a z16 loaded with a Ton of CP's and something like python to do the work and drive the servos, I have no idea what the hardware would look like meaning the backplane And

Re: Google has 5,500,000 mainframes WAS: Definition of mainframe?

2023-07-31 Thread Steve Thompson
Because you *can* pick it up and carry it? On 7/31/2023 2:12 PM, Jon Perryman wrote: Why isn't a Google server a mainframe? Steve Thompson -- For IBM-MAIN subscribe / signoff / archive access instructions, send email to

Re: Google has 5,500,000 mainframes WAS: Definition of mainframe?

2023-07-31 Thread Tom Brennan
Maybe if you told us why you're asking, people could give better answers. On 7/31/2023 11:12 AM, Jon Perryman wrote: > On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 03:41:35 AM PDT, P H <04843e86df79-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu> wrote: IBM's definition of mainframe (Source: DICTIONARY OF IBM &

Google has 5,500,000 mainframes WAS: Definition of mainframe?

2023-07-31 Thread Jon Perryman
> On Monday, July 31, 2023 at 03:41:35 AM PDT, P H > <04843e86df79-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu> wrote: > IBM's definition of mainframe (Source: DICTIONARY OF IBM & COMPUTING > TERMINOLOGY) > mainframe n. A computer, usually in a computer center, with extensive > capabilities and >

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Colin Paice
A volume is a convenient picture - they no longer exist on modern DASD. Data is spread across many different PC sized disks. We have extended volumes which are bigger than traditional volumes. It gives more space for the same number of volumes. A "track" is mapped to one PC sized disk, and block

Re: bitmapped displays [was: Definition of mainframe?]

2023-07-31 Thread Rick Troth
On 7/31/23 10:54, Paul Gilmartin wrote: On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 10:08:34 -0400, Rick Troth wrote: ... On MVS (USS), I remember using 'xterm', which is the X11 app I use most. Lately, I'm more likely to run 'xterm' on some other platform and then SSH-in to USS. Works. A benefit of xterm on MVS

IEC070I XXXXXXX,...

2023-07-31 Thread Jim Mooney
I searched the doc and this list, but can't find any explanation. Does anyone know why the rc(sfi) section would be 'XXX'ed out in these msgs? IEC070I XXX,PRDXXWS5,TS56PRDXXWS5,XMLOG,7499,RPXM10, IEC070I PCRES.PRODV.PXW5.XMLOG,PCRES.PRODV.PXW5.XMLOG.DATA, IEC070I CATALOG.USER7

Re: bitmapped displays [was: Definition of mainframe?]

2023-07-31 Thread Paul Gilmartin
On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 10:08:34 -0400, Rick Troth wrote: >... >On MVS (USS), I remember using 'xterm', which is the X11 app I use most. >Lately, I'm more likely to run 'xterm' on some other platform and then >SSH-in to USS. Works. On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 10:39:37 -0500, Grant Taylor wrote: >On

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Glenn Knickerbocker
On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 10:54:28 -0500, Grant Taylor wrote: >> Why don't we see these systems being discussed (or maybe I just don't >> frequent the right web sites)? >I suspect it's /where/ we are talking. This list, IBM territory reddit.com/r/mainframe/ does occasionally get some Unisys

Re: Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Grant Taylor
On 7/31/23 10:40 AM, Steve Thompson wrote: I just have to throw this in here. IBM is not the only maker of Mainframes. Nicely done. :-) I understand that Fujitsu still makes mainframes. That's my understanding too. Does UNISYS still make mainframes? My understanding is that UNISYS is

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Grant Taylor
On 7/31/23 9:28 AM, Schmitt, Michael wrote: MAINFRAME: a computer that is larger than a midrange minicomputer and smaller than a supercomputer. Chuckle. pc < workstation < minicomputer < mainframe < supercomputer I posit that we should word smith to be "single computer" to rule out large

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Grant Taylor
On 7/31/23 6:37 AM, Jay Maynard wrote: It's not just CPU power or number of cores, but the ability to connect thousands of volumes of data and access them simultaneously, and move that data from point A to point B efficiently. Please elaborate, are those volumes separate DASD devices or are

Mainframe Makers.... WAS: Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Steve Thompson
I just have to throw this in here. IBM is not the only maker of Mainframes. I understand that Fujitsu still makes mainframes. Does UNISYS still make mainframes? How about Honeywell Bull? Why don't we see these systems being discussed (or maybe I just don't frequent the right web sites)?

Re: bitmapped displays [was: Definition of mainframe?]

2023-07-31 Thread Grant Taylor
On 7/31/23 9:54 AM, Paul Gilmartin wrote: A benefit of xterm on MVS (any system, in fact) is the ability to launch a child job with the same environment tediously built by the parent. I wouldn't think that would be limited to XTerm nor MVS. My understanding is that once the current / active

Re: PCOMM alternate screen size

2023-07-31 Thread Radoslaw Skorupka
W dniu 31.07.2023 o 17:13, Dana Mitchell pisze: On Thu, 28 Jun 2012 20:17:13 -0400, Thomas Conley wrote: On 6/28/2012 7:55 PM, Bob Rutledge wrote: Thomas Conley wrote: I'm being forced to use PCOMM, and I can't figure out how to set the alternate screen size. any help you can give would

Re: PCOMM alternate screen size

2023-07-31 Thread Dana Mitchell
On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 15:18:50 +, Sri h Kolusu wrote: >>>. I'd prefer to have something more like 50x135. But my session.ws file >>>doesn't contain the screensize= parameter > >Dana, > >You need to code the screensize parameter under 3270. So, edit the .WS file >with any text editing

Re: Automount (was USS Features)

2023-07-31 Thread Radoslaw Skorupka
Regarding automount feature: IMHO it is less than useless. - It require some effort to establish and manage (including storage adm.) - It wastes space, because even smallest empty home directory occupies first extent of the ZFS/HFS. - Space (extents) taken by some large files and then deleted is

Re: PCOMM alternate screen size

2023-07-31 Thread Schmitt, Michael
Check what gets updated when you change the screen size to one of the other listed values. It must be saving it somewhere, either in a config file or in the registry. And there's only so many places that PCOMM stores configuration files. When you find what's updated, note how it stores this

Re: PCOMM alternate screen size

2023-07-31 Thread Sri h Kolusu
>>. I'd prefer to have something more like 50x135. But my session.ws file >>doesn't contain the screensize= parameter Dana, You need to code the screensize parameter under 3270. So, edit the .WS file with any text editing software and add the following. [3270] QueryReplyMode=Auto

PCOMM alternate screen size

2023-07-31 Thread Dana Mitchell
On Thu, 28 Jun 2012 20:17:13 -0400, Thomas Conley wrote: >On 6/28/2012 7:55 PM, Bob Rutledge wrote: >> Thomas Conley wrote: >>> I'm being forced to use PCOMM, and I can't figure out how to set the >>> alternate screen size. any help you can give would be appreciated. >> >> Hie thee to the

Re: USS Features

2023-07-31 Thread Paul Gilmartin
On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 09:43:38 -0500, Grant Taylor wrote: >On 7/31/23 8:06 AM, Rick Troth wrote: >> per-user automount does not necessarily waste space > >IMHO automount is completely independent of shared / separate per user >disk space. > >> The thing which is mounted might be a sub-directory of

Re: bitmapped displays [was: Definition of mainframe?]

2023-07-31 Thread Paul Gilmartin
On Mon, 31 Jul 2023 10:08:34 -0400, Rick Troth wrote: >... >On MVS (USS), I remember using 'xterm', which is the X11 app I use most. >Lately, I'm more likely to run 'xterm' on some other platform and then >SSH-in to USS. Works. > A benefit of xterm on MVS (any system, in fact) is the ability

Re: USS Features

2023-07-31 Thread Grant Taylor
On 7/31/23 8:06 AM, Rick Troth wrote: per-user automount does not necessarily waste space IMHO automount is completely independent of shared / separate per user disk space. The thing which is mounted might be a sub-directory of a shared space. Agreed. Also, automount is not exclusively

Re: They are *all* dinosaurs

2023-07-31 Thread Grant Taylor
On 7/31/23 9:28 AM, Seymour J Metz wrote: But look at the dates and explain to me, e.g., how z is legacy but x86 is not, how z/OS is legacy but Unix is not, how COBOL and PL/I are legacy but C is not. Oh! That's simple. "legacy" is what existed before the "new and hot thing" when someone

Re: [EXT] Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Seymour J Metz
The 2260 had no function keys. The 3270 was available with half a dozen keyboard arrangements, with no, five or 12 function keys. -- Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz http://mason.gmu.edu/~smetz3 From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU] on

They are *all* dinosaurs

2023-07-31 Thread Seymour J Metz
The media sling around terms like dinosaur and legacy for mainframes and mainframe software, and tout "new" languages and platforms like C, Unix and windows. But look at the dates and explain to me, e.g., how z is legacy but x86 is not, how z/OS is legacy but Unix is not, how COBOL and PL/I are

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Schmitt, Michael
MAINFRAME: a computer that is larger than a midrange minicomputer and smaller than a supercomputer. More seriously, http://catb.org/jargon/html/M/mainframe.html refers to http://catb.org/jargon/html/D/dinosaur.html, which is defined as "Any hardware requiring raised flooring and special

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Rick Troth
On 7/31/23 09:09, Dave Jones wrote: Opps.I was wrong. According to this site (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CERN_httpd), the first web server at CERN was indeed written and hosted on a NeXT Computer running NeXTSTEP. I must have dreamed the part about VM, then. Thanks for clarifying. I

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Rick Troth
On 7/30/23 18:50, Andrew Rowley wrote: On 30/07/2023 2:28 am, Jon Perryman wrote: ASK YOURSELF: Name the z/OS Unix feature that sort of fixes the fundamental design flaw with Unix filesystems just described? I suspect most people won't think about each user having a unique filesystem using

Re: bitmapped displays [was: Definition of mainframe?]

2023-07-31 Thread Rick Troth
On 7/31/23 00:33, Grant Taylor wrote: On 7/29/23 5:47 PM, Rick Troth wrote: Xwindows is used by Linux because it had been developed widely and was common on Unix when Linux came into popular view.  Xwindows itself is an excellent development. Sadly, Xwindows is way to "chatty" and has other

Re: [EXT] Ars Technica: The IBM mainframe: How it runs and why it survives

2023-07-31 Thread Crawford Robert C (Contractor)
480 characters? Sounds like Twitter. Was the 2260 keyboard the one with two, count 'em, two PF keys? Robert Crawford Abstract Evolutions LLC (210) 913-3822 -Original Message- From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List On Behalf Of billogden Sent: Saturday, July 29, 2023 11:16 AM To:

Re: Additional IBM Physical Tape Option: TS7700+TS4300

2023-07-31 Thread Radoslaw Skorupka
And this is first IBM-branded use of "non-mainframe" tape drives. I mean LTO. Yes, it is on back-end, not native (native - we discussed it many times). However VTS is present for 20+ years, as well as LTO. And for the years the only supported tape at backend was Jaguar or previously MAGSTAR

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Dave Jones
Opps.I was wrong. According to this site (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CERN_httpd), the first web server at CERN was indeed written and hosted on a NeXT Computer running NeXTSTEP. I must have dreamed the part about VM, then. DJ

Re: USS Features

2023-07-31 Thread Rick Troth
per-user automount does not necessarily waste space The thing which is mounted might be a sub-directory of a shared space. Also, automount is not exclusively for user home directories. It's great for selected program products. -- R; <>< On 7/30/23 23:46, Grant Taylor wrote: On 7/30/23

Re: AT-TLS and CSSMTP setup

2023-07-31 Thread Allan Staller
Classification: Confidential Have you updated the TCP/IP policy agent accordingly? -Original Message- From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List On Behalf Of Brian Westerman Sent: Saturday, July 29, 2023 9:12 PM To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU Subject: Re: AT-TLS and CSSMTP setup [CAUTION: This

Re: Chaining format 9 and format 3 DSCBs in EAV VTOC

2023-07-31 Thread rpinion865
Been there done that, got the t-shirt. Me to ops manager "we need to IPL ASAP due to CA-ACF2 CSA storage creep, CSA will run out very soon". Ops manager to me "no way we are going to IPL in the middle of the day". I told him do not call me when the system goes down tonight in the middle of

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread Jay Maynard
To me, mainframe denotes one large computer that is expandable to handle volumes of tasks and data that require hundreds if not thousands of PC-class systems to handle, with an emphasis on reliability, availability, and serviceability. It's not just CPU power or number of cores, but the ability to

Re: Chaining format 9 and format 3 DSCBs in EAV VTOC

2023-07-31 Thread Radoslaw Skorupka
Fortunately nowadays the reorg is possible without maintenance window. BTW: I had similar situations and I learnt to reply "You may not allow me to stop production, but it WILL stop, despite on you decision, and your manager decision... However it likely will happen during peak hours, not at

Re: Definition of mainframe? Was: Ars Technica

2023-07-31 Thread P H
IBM's definition of mainframe (Source: DICTIONARY OF IBM & COMPUTING TERMINOLOGY) mainframe n. A computer, usually in a computer center, with extensive capabilities and resources to which other computers may be connected so that they can share facilities. Originally referred to the central