Search WebSpherePower's 6,962 WebSphere, Java, and Eclipse article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Twitter Feed Click here for the Twitter feed.
NEWS FEATURE
IBM's plans for WebSphere and iSeries
By Steve Niles

In an IBM Corporation Series Nation Teleconference, John Quarantello of IBM eServer Solutions Marketing outlined the latest news for WebSphere and iSeries. On the day's agenda were discussions of their new no-cost distance learning for WAS (WebSphere Application Server)-Express and WebFacing, WebSphere Application Server for i & pSeries Linux, and news of HATS (Host Access Transformation Server) and HATS Limited Edition. Quarantello also introduced the iSeries Roadmap to J2EE.

No-cost distance learning
Before discussing the no-cost distance learning for WAS, Quarantello provided some background on the technology.

WebSphere Application Server is a high performance, scalable transaction engine designed for dynamic e-business applications. The WebSphere Development Studio client for iSeries (WDSc) includes an IBM WebFacing Tool that can be used to reface and modernize iSeries 5250 applications. It supports 5250 and browser interfaces and can convert RPG/5250 applications to GUI (Graphical User Interface). The new 2003 iSeries hardware does not require 5250 OLTP workload.

WebSphere Application Server-Express for iSeries was considered to be the most important WebSphere announcement ever for iSeries. WAS-Express V5 for iSeries includes the following:

  • Web application server--WAS-Express V5;

  • Application development tool--WebSphere Development Studio Client (WDSc);

  • IBM Telephone Directory

WAS-Express V5 features OS/400 support--V5R2 & V5R1 and Intel support (Windows 2000 & Linux).

The no-cost iSeries WebSphere Express and WebFacing education is designed to educate iSeries sales channels, application ISVs (Independent Software Vendors), consultants, and customers on the value and workings of the WebSphere Express and WebFacing Technologies. The "No Charge Offering" includes 16 total hours of lectures and labs, broken down as follows:

  • WebSphere Express Lecture (3 Hours): What is WAS Express? Why is it of interest? How is it installed and used?
  • WebSphere Express Lab (4 Hours);
  • WebFacing Lecture (3 Hours): What is WebFacing? Why is it useful? How does one develop and deploy?
  • WebFacing Lab (6 Hours).

In the labs, students prepare and use their own Workstation and Server environments, and their workstation prerequisites are identified (e.g. WDSC 5.0, ...), their iSeries Server prerequisites are identified (e.g. OS/400 V5R2, WAS 5.0 Express, Apache ...), and their workstation to/from iSeries Server Connectivity prerequisites are identified (e.g. TCP/IP ...). A WebFacing sample application is made available via FTP download, and technical questions and answers are supported via iTCeBiz email and limited phone support. For more information, you can visit http://www.ibmweblectureservices.ihost.com/ibm/iseries_plus.


1  ·  2  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Resources & Strategies (8 articles)
   A WebSphere pot o' gold
   WebSphere, grid computing, and China
   Raise the Red Flag: WebSphere goes to China
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Recent WebSpherePower Articles
A perfect 10: celebrating 10 years online
You can help bring security and safety back to White House email
Introducing the WebSpherePower RSS feeds
From New Jersey to Palm Bay, Florida
A WebSphere pot o' gold
How Elvis entered the building and CES went out the window
WebSphere Application Server 6: what's it all mean?
WebSpherePower News
Excitement brewing for JavaOne 2010, with or without Google
Large companies ignore data centre advice
Onapsis to Release ERP Vulnerability Testing Suite
Botnet Takedown May Yield Valuable Data
VMware app dev platform gazes beyond SpringSource Java
IBM Claims World's Fastest Chip
'Free Java': InfoWorld's guide to the protest goodies
>> Read all the news
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: Smartphone smarts for a mobile world
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
DominoPower: It's time for Lotus to double-down on Linux and open source
OutlookPower: The strange case of Outlook losing notes and requiring passwords
ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login