Friday, May 23, 2014

Back to the future: Why z/OS mainframe is the ideal cloud platform

Back to the future: Why z/OS mainframe is the ideal cloud platform


By Pat Toole and Frank DeGilio
Fifty years ago, IBM CEO Thomas Watson Jr. unveiled the System/360—the first general purpose computing system specifically designed for business—calling it “the beginning of a new generation, not only of computers, but of their applications in business, science and government.”
It was this vision for computing that made possible the creation of bar codes, ATMs, electronic stock trading, online travel reservations, weather modeling and countless other inventions that have changed the way the world works.
Watson’s statement is as timely and true today as it was then, in the context of the evolution that’s occurring within IT via cloud computing. The System/360 ushered in the era of flexibility, adaptability, and economy for IT. It pioneered the concepts of backward and forward compatibility, the ability to add capacity as you needed it, and protecting the client’s investments in their technology, applications and data.
As we talk about the next inevitable phases of cloud, like platform as a service (PaaS) and software as a service (SaaS), we encounter some very specific themes and challenges that cry out for systems with those qualities:
• How do I provide multi-tenancy with the greatest number of people sharing the same machine as possible, securely and efficiently?
• How do I dynamically scale an environment immediately without waiting to provision?
• How do I provide each user a unique performance experience on the smallest number of systems possible?
• How do I keep track of how much capacity each user is using?
• How do I support thousands of users with a handful of IT professionals?
If there were an ideal operating system that could provide multi-tenancy, dynamic scaling, a unique user experience, fine-grained usage monitoring, and that could support thousands of users with a small group of admins, PaaS and SaaS solutions would be simple. Oh wait, there is—z/OS.
What was once only accessible to COBOL and Assembler programmers is now available to anyone. Today, a team of young IBM hardware and software developers in Poughkeepsie is creating simple web-based interfaces for z/OS, which will allow any programmer with web development experience to use this powerful platform for PaaS and SaaS.
IBM also continues to refine the technology and the delivery of mainframe computing for cloud applications. The new IBM Enterprise Cloud System can support up to 6,000 virtual machines in a single system, provide a secure multi-tenant environment and dynamically share resources across enterprise workloads, with higher system efficiency and greater scalability that lowers the total cost of Linux cloud deployments by up to 55 percent over comparable x86-based cloud infrastructure.
And the new “IBM MSP Utility Pricing for System z” pricing model, delivered through IBM Global Financing, provides consumption-based pricing designed especially to make mainframe technologies more widely accessible to Managed Service Providers. This consumption-based approach allows MSPs to focus on building their businesses, rather than on the cost of their infrastructure.
These innovations unlock the potential for z/OS and the modern mainframe to be the cloud platform of choice, enabling people to create business solutions built on the most secure, available, reliable cloud infrastructure ever known.


http://thoughtsoncloud.com/2014/05/back-future-zos-mainframe-ideal-cloud-platform/

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Make the Extraordinary possible: IBM Mainframe50

Make the Extraordinary possible: IBM Mainframe50

possible
IBM Mainframe50
The mainframe is a revolutionary computing system that is transforming business, whole industries, and the world as we know it.
By continually adapting to trends and evolving IT, we’re driving new approaches to cloud, analytics, security and mobile computing to help tackle challenges never before thought possible. We do that by collaborating with our clients to build better technology every day.
But the pioneering innovations of the mainframe all serve one enduring mission: Deliver game-changing technology that makes the extraordinary possible and improves the way the world works.
See the link below to watch a replay of the April 8 NYC Mainframe50 event.

The Engines of Progress

They transform our lives. Their visionary endeavors make our world smarter and more connected.
Previous

First National Bank

Critical financial services to Africa’s unbanked 80 percent
FNB's "bank in a box" enables millions of individuals across Africa to startup new businesses, save for college and improve lives
 

Met Office

Vital reports to empower industries and save lives
The Met Office generates thousands of weather forecasts a day to help global industries and governments make crucial decisions
 

Walmart

Helping 250 million people a week save money and live better
From a Five and Dime in Bentonville, Arkansas to a retail superforce serving customers in 27 countries around the world, Walmart has built an empire on one simple value: the customer always comes first.
 

First National Bank

Critical financial services to Africa’s unbanked 80 percent
FNB's "bank in a box" enables millions of individuals across Africa to startup new businesses, save for college and improve lives
         

 

GENERATION z

They will create the future.
Every year, students at over 1,000 universities across 67 countries are learning to solve tomorrow’s grand challenges with the mainframe.
The top 43 students from around the globe met in New York City for the first ever Master the Mainframe World Championship.

50 extraordinary years

They invented the modern world. Organizations and leaders have reinvented business, transformed industries and helped solve some of the world’s greatest challenges with the world’s most innovative and trusted platform. These achievements are woven into the fabric of industry and society.

Sabre reservation system

The world’s first automated passenger reservation system, Sabre, is the basis for today’s web-based travel industry. Launched on two IBM 7090 mainframes, the application written in the 60s is able to process billions of transactions a week today.