> a left-wing journal in the UK

Really? They are firmly liberal in the European sense of the word, what in the 
US would be called libertarian. Free markets, light regulation, globalism, 
invisible hand, all that stuff. Hardly left-wing. They also have more readers 
in the US than in the UK. And the relevance of their politics to their 
knowledge of mainframes is?

Charles


-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU] On Behalf 
Of Aled Hughes
Sent: Wednesday, July 3, 2019 12:16 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: Disquieting comment in a Wall Street Journal article.

 Thanks for sharing that Clark.  It is disturbing in some ways that an ex IBMer 
appears tobe running down mainframes. As Timothy Sipples mentioned, he based 
his theoryon an article in the Economist - a left-wing journal in the UK, and 
I'm afraid that I doubt if any of their journalists understand mainframes at 
all. But he wasright that bank branches are closing - in the UK, nearly 3,000 
in the lastthree years, and about 60 branches a month are closing this year. We 
canunderstand the banks' reasoning - some branches had about two customers a 
day!Of course there are social implications, and as Bill Johnson mentioned, in 
theUS and in the UK a few new banks are opening. Here in the UK, Post Offices 
are now actually doing everyday banking for most people. Perhaps something the 
USPS should think about? 

Timothy's final comment is very relevant and correct, Irving should have chosen 
his words more carefully. 

Keep the flag flying for the mainframe! 

A L Hughes
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Clark F. Morris <cfmt...@uniserve.com>
To: IBM-MAIN <IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU>
Sent: Tue, 2 Jul 2019 21:40
Subject: Disquieting comment in a Wall Street Journal article.

An opinion piece by Irving Wladawsky-Berger, a contributor to the Wall
Street Journal's CIO Journal has the following paragraph.

"The shake-up of banking should be great for customers, according to
the Economist. “The benefits of technological change are likely to be
vast. Costs should tumble as branches are shut, creaking mainframe
systems retired and bureaucracy culled.”

Irving Wladawsky-Berger is a visiting lecturer at MIT which has the
following brief biography.  "After a 37-year career with IBM,
Wladawsky-Berger retired from the company in May of 2007. At IBM, his
primary focus was on innovation and technical strategy. He was
responsible for identifying emerging technologies and marketplace
developments critical to the future of the IT industry and for
organizing appropriate activities in and outside IBM in order to
capitalize on them. Wladawsky-Berger led a number of IBM’s companywide
initiatives, including the Internet and e-business, supercomputing,
Linux, and Grid computing. He continues to consult for IBM on major
new market strategies like Cloud Computing and Smart Planet. In March
of 2008, Wladawsky-Berger joined Citigroup as a strategic advisor,
helping with innovation and technology initiatives across the company.
He is helping to formulate Citigroup initiatives related to the future
of global banking, including mobile banking, Internet-based financial
services, and financial systems modeling and analysis."  

Given his background it is troubling for those of us who support the z
series.  

The following URL is for the article.
https://emailshare.cmail19.com/t/n/d-l-25bb70929cfa11e9a60d64415353e21b-l-d-r-l/

Clark Morris

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