Not true. I'm currently working for 2 customers (insurance companies),
both use "high level" languages like COBOL and PL/1 (and C), but in both
companies
there is a need for ASSEMBLER coding now and then, be it enhancement to
compile supporting routines
retrieving sources from CA Librarian libra
I have to agree with Bernd -.I was a contractor for many years, some times
working in two different installations at the same time.Every where I worked,
the management didnt want to mention "Assembler" and Yet every where I workedI
was asked to look at some old Assembler code and sometimes sev
-- Original Message --
From: Bernd Oppolzer
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: Is the IBM Assembler List still alive
Date: Sat, 2 Sep 2023 09:28:10 +0200
Not true. I'm currently working for 2 customers (insurance companies),
both use "high level" languages like COBOL and PL
z/OS's doing multi-threading only for zIIPs and not for standard CPs is an
implementation choice, with the challenge of accomplishing consistent and
correct chargeback data being a factor in that decision.
Peter Relson
z/OS Core Technology Design
---
I have long had the ambition to tack on HLASM to my repertoire, and I keep
putting it off to learn something else instead (or to play Factorio). I used a
~lot~ of assembler on a DEC-10, and as a COBOL developer I did indeed read my
own dumps, which sometimes meant I had to figure out what machi
Those were my thoughts too.
Mark Jacobs
Sent from ProtonMail, Swiss-based encrypted email.
GPG Public Key -
https://api.protonmail.ch/pks/lookup?op=get&search=markjac...@protonmail.com
--- Original Message ---
On Saturday, September 2nd, 2023 at 8:42 AM, Peter Relson
wrote:
> z/O
Hi,
I do not really know what I am trying to explain, but anyway.
Ibm has made a kind of minimal security approach to access an HMCusing https,
i.e. a self signed cert.
Ibm also documents how one can change this,i.e. generate a key pair,, a csr, get certified by "some"
CA, then upload the key
On Sat, 2 Sep 2023 09:03:47 -0400, Bob Bridges wrote:
>... I used a ~lot~ of assembler on a DEC-10, ...
>
>(Actually I think the problem is the difficulty in writing a hello-world
>program. It's mind-numbingly simple in REXX or indeed in almost any
>interpreted language; before I can do it
https://99-bottles-of-beer.net/language-assembler-(system-370)-48.html
On Sat, Sep 2, 2023 at 12:27 PM Paul Gilmartin
<042bfe9c879d-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu> wrote:
>
> On Sat, 2 Sep 2023 09:03:47 -0400, Bob Bridges wrote:
>
> >... I used a ~lot~ of assembler on a DEC-10, ...
> >
> >
W dniu 02.09.2023 o 18:41, Peter Sylvester pisze:
Hi,
I do not really know what I am trying to explain, but anyway.
Ibm has made a kind of minimal security approach to access an HMCusing
https, i.e. a self signed cert.
Ibm also documents how one can change this,i.e. generate a key pair,,
a
What I remember about Macro (the infamously-named assembler language for DEC
machines) is that on the DEC-10 there are hardware instructions for viewing the
36-bit word in bytes of any length you choose: 36 1-bit bytes, 18 2-bit bytes,
five 7-bit bytes (back then it used 7-bit ASCII so five char
On Sat, 2 Sep 2023 16:02:43 -0400, Bob Bridges wrote:
>
>(Naming an assembler language "Macro" probably seemed as clever a marketing
>choice as naming a z/OS security product "Top Secret", but the same difficulty
>applies to both: When you want to look up something about either on the
>internet
Ah, that's the trick! It's been a while since I tried looking up DEC-10
assembler, but I have meanwhile learned that finding what I want is often a
matter of picking the right search terms. Not always the OBVIOUS search terms,
but still.
---
Bob Bridges, robhbrid...@gmail.com, cell 336 382-73
People will join the list, people will leave the list. Some of them will let
the list know why they left (as in this case) and some of them will either just
stop participating or leave without any word at all. It's sad to hear that
people are leaving the list for any reason, but to leave becau
On 9/2/23 11:41 AM, Peter Sylvester wrote:
Hi,
Hi,
I do not really know what I am trying to explain, but anyway.
I've found that sharing what I understand something to be beneficial for
multiple reasons:
1) articulating it often helps clarify what I'm trying to articulate
2) it gives o
I recently stopped posting on a forum (not this one), and I can tell you why
~I~ didn't make an announcement about it:
The first is kind of like yours, Brian: I haven't yet been able to find any
way of saying "I don't like the conversation here any more" without it
sounding, in my ears at leas
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