Arcview 3.X 3.0A System Requirements

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Arcview 3.X 3.0A System Requirements ArcView 3.x 3.0a System Requirements This PDF contains system requirements information, including hardware requirements, best performance configurations, and limitations, for ArcView 3.x 3.0a. Compaq/Digital DIGITAL UNIX 4.0 Compaq/Digital DIGITAL UNIX 4.0b Data General AviiON DGUX 5.4R3.10 HP HP-UX 10.10 HP HP-UX 10.20 IBM AIX 4.1.4.0 IBM AIX 4.1.5.0 IBM AIX 4.2.0.0 IBM AIX 4.2.1.0 IBM AIX 4.3.0.0 Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Macintosh 7.5x Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Macintosh 7.6x Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Macintosh 8.0 Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Macintosh 8.1 PC-Intel Windows 3.1, Windows for Workgroups PC-Intel Windows 95 PC-Intel Windows NT 3.51 SGI IRIX 6.2 SGI IRIX 6.3 Sun Solaris 1x SunOS 4.1.3 Sun Solaris 2.5 (SPARC) Sun Solaris 2.5.1 (SPARC) ArcView 3.0a on Compaq/Digital DIGITAL UNIX 4.0 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: Compaq/Digital Operating System: DIGITAL UNIX 4.0 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Window System: CDE or Motif ArcView 3.0a on Compaq/Digital DIGITAL UNIX 4.0b Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: Compaq/Digital Operating System: DIGITAL UNIX 4.0b Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Memory/RAM: 64 MB Swap Space: 75 MB Window System: CDE or Motif ArcView 3.0a on Data General AViiON DGUX 5.4R3.10 Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: Data General AViiON Operating System: DGUX 5.4R3.10 Service Packs/Patches: dgux_5.4R3.10.MU01, dgux_5.4R3.10.MU02 and dgux_5.4R3.10.MU03 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 ArcView 3.0a on HP HP-UX 10.10 Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: HP Operating System: HP-UX 10.10 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 ArcView 3.0a on HP HP-UX 10.20 Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: HP Operating System: HP-UX 10.20 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 ArcView 3.0a on IBM AIX 4.1.4.0 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: IBM Operating System: AIX 4.1.4.0 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Window System: CDE or AIXWindows ArcView 3.0a on IBM AIX 4.1.5.0 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: IBM Operating System: AIX 4.1.5.0 Service Packs/Patches: APAR IX66828 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Window System: CDE or AIXWindows Notes: User of GXT-800P Graphics Adapter also require patch APAR IX77314 ArcView 3.0a on IBM AIX 4.2.0.0 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: IBM Operating System: AIX 4.2.0.0 Service Packs/Patches: APAR IX66828 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Window System: CDE or AIXWindows ArcView 3.0a on IBM AIX 4.2.1.0 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: IBM Operating System: AIX 4.2.1.0 Service Packs/Patches: APAR IX66828 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Window System: CDE or AIXWindows ArcView 3.0a on IBM AIX 4.3.0.0 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: IBM Operating System: AIX 4.3.0.0 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Window System: CDE or AIXWindows ArcView 3.0a on Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Macintosh 7.5x Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Operating System: Macintosh 7.5x Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Memory/RAM: 12 MB RAM Disk Space: 40 MB Disk Space Requirements: Disk Space: 55MB (ArcView GIS) 22MB (esridata) 1200MB (ESRI Data & Maps Volume 1, compressed, separate CD) Notes: Discussion: - "The last certified Mac OS for ArcView 3.0a is Mac OS 8.1. ESRI has decided not to certify ArcView GIS 3.0a beyond Mac OS 8.1." - "Operating System: System 7.5 or higher" Source: http://arcweb/products/arcinfo/platforms/mac.html ArcView 3.0a on Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Macintosh 7.6x Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Operating System: Macintosh 7.6x Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Memory/RAM: 12 MB RAM Disk Space: 40 MB Disk Space Requirements: Disk Space: 55MB (ArcView GIS) 22MB (esridata) 1200MB (ESRI Data & Maps Volume 1, compressed, separate CD) Notes: Discussion: - "The last certified Mac OS for ArcView 3.0a is Mac OS 8.1. ESRI has decided not to certify ArcView GIS 3.0a beyond Mac OS 8.1." - "Operating System: System 7.5 or higher" Source: http://arcweb/products/arcinfo/platforms/mac.html ArcView 3.0a on Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Macintosh 8.0 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Operating System: Macintosh 8.0 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Memory/RAM: 12 MB RAM Disk Space: 40 MB Disk Space Requirements: Disk Space: 55MB (ArcView GIS) 22MB (esridata) 1200MB (ESRI Data & Maps Volume 1, compressed, separate CD) Notes: Discussion: - "The last certified Mac OS for ArcView 3.0a is Mac OS 8.1. ESRI has decided not to certify ArcView GIS 3.0a beyond Mac OS 8.1." - "Operating System: System 7.5 or higher" Source: http://arcweb/products/arcinfo/platforms/mac.html ArcView 3.0a on Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Macintosh 8.1 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: Macintosh (Power Macintosh) Operating System: Macintosh 8.1 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Memory/RAM: 12 MB RAM Disk Space: 40 MB Disk Space Requirements: Disk Space: 55MB (ArcView GIS) 22MB (esridata) 1200MB (ESRI Data & Maps Volume 1, compressed, separate CD) Notes: Discussion: - "The last certified Mac OS for ArcView 3.0a is Mac OS 8.1. ESRI has decided not to certify ArcView GIS 3.0a beyond Mac OS 8.1." - "Operating System: System 7.5 or higher" Source: http://arcweb/products/arcinfo/platforms/mac.html ArcView 3.0a on PC-Intel Windows 3.1, Windows for Workgroups Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: PC-Intel Operating System: Windows 3.1, Windows for Workgroups Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Processor: Industry-standard personal computer with at least an 80486 or higher Intel-based microprocessor. Memory/RAM: 16MB required / 24MB recommended Disk Space Requirements: Disk requirements vary per component. Not all extensions run on all the versions of Windows. Notes: This operating system is no longer supported by MicroSoft. ESRI can no longer support this software do to lack of support from this operating system's vendor. ArcView 3.0a on PC-Intel Windows 95 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: PC-Intel Operating System: Windows 95 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements CPU Speed: Pentium or higher Processor: Industry-standard personal computer with at least an 80486 or higher Intel-based microprocessor. Memory/RAM: 16 MB Required/24 MB Recommended Swap Space: 300 MB minimum Disk Space Requirements: Disk requirements vary per component. Notes: This operating system is no longer supported by MicroSoft. ESRI can no longer support this software do to lack of support from this operating system's vendor. ArcView 3.0a on PC-Intel Windows NT 3.51 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: PC-Intel Operating System: Windows NT 3.51 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Processor: Pentium or higher Memory/RAM: 16MB required/24MB recommended Disk Space Requirements: See setup for disk requirements per component. Notes: Not all extensions run on all the versions of Windows. ArcView 3.0a on SGI IRIX 6.2 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: SGI Operating System: IRIX 6.2 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Window System: 6.2 based on OSF/Motif 1.2.4 ArcView 3.0a on SGI IRIX 6.3 Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: SGI Operating System: IRIX 6.3 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 ArcView 3.0a on Sun Solaris 1x SunOS 4.1.3 Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: Sun Operating System: Solaris 1x SunOS 4.1.3 Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Window System: CDE or OpenWindows ArcView 3.0a on Sun Solaris 2.5 (SPARC) Quick Links Hardware Requirements Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: Sun Operating System: Solaris 2.5 (SPARC) Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Window System: CDE or OpenWindows ArcView 3.0a on Sun Solaris 2.5.1 (SPARC) Product: ArcView 3.0a Platform: Sun Operating System: Solaris 2.5.1 (SPARC) Shipping/Release Date: February 18, 1997 Hardware Requirements Window System: CDE or OpenWindows .
Recommended publications
  • Validated Products List, 1995 No. 3: Programming Languages, Database
    NISTIR 5693 (Supersedes NISTIR 5629) VALIDATED PRODUCTS LIST Volume 1 1995 No. 3 Programming Languages Database Language SQL Graphics POSIX Computer Security Judy B. Kailey Product Data - IGES Editor U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Technology Administration National Institute of Standards and Technology Computer Systems Laboratory Software Standards Validation Group Gaithersburg, MD 20899 July 1995 QC 100 NIST .056 NO. 5693 1995 NISTIR 5693 (Supersedes NISTIR 5629) VALIDATED PRODUCTS LIST Volume 1 1995 No. 3 Programming Languages Database Language SQL Graphics POSIX Computer Security Judy B. Kailey Product Data - IGES Editor U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Technology Administration National Institute of Standards and Technology Computer Systems Laboratory Software Standards Validation Group Gaithersburg, MD 20899 July 1995 (Supersedes April 1995 issue) U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Ronald H. Brown, Secretary TECHNOLOGY ADMINISTRATION Mary L. Good, Under Secretary for Technology NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECHNOLOGY Arati Prabhakar, Director FOREWORD The Validated Products List (VPL) identifies information technology products that have been tested for conformance to Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) in accordance with Computer Systems Laboratory (CSL) conformance testing procedures, and have a current validation certificate or registered test report. The VPL also contains information about the organizations, test methods and procedures that support the validation programs for the FIPS identified in this document. The VPL includes computer language processors for programming languages COBOL, Fortran, Ada, Pascal, C, M[UMPS], and database language SQL; computer graphic implementations for GKS, COM, PHIGS, and Raster Graphics; operating system implementations for POSIX; Open Systems Interconnection implementations; and computer security implementations for DES, MAC and Key Management.
    [Show full text]
  • ESRI the Leader in Geographic Information Systems
    Executive Workshop on Enterprise Geospatial Systems Geospatial Infrastructure Demands Dave Peters July 15,2004 J8338 1of 55 What is the challenge? Develop Enterprise support for GIS Operations Important Business Drivers: - Mature and growing GIS Operations - Rapidly expanding GIS Data Infrastructure - Evolving IT Infrastructure DOI Enterprise GIS Challenges - Define requirements for a scalable architecture - Connecting User Applications with Data Sources - GIS: Understand the proper architecture strategy - IT: Establish an Actionable Infrastructure Blueprint that supports business needs (GIS Operational Requirements) J8338 2of 55 GIS Software Evolution Overview GIS Department Desktop Viewers Distributed Internet Enterprise Federated Professional Query and Analysis Operations GIS Operations GIS Operations GIS Operations Remote Users Data Development Project Research Specific Operations Internet Desktop Interface Web Search Engines Data Maintenance Ad Hoc Mapping Work Management Map Products Enterprise GIS Collaborative Operations GIS Projects General Operations Delivery Routing Data Publishing Personal GIS Mapping Services Map Production Emergency Response Data Integration Query / Analysis Web Commerce Embedded Applications ArcInfo ArcView GIS MapObjects ArcView IMS ArcGIS Desktop ArcInfo ODE - ArcInfo 1999 Geography Network 1982 1992 MapObjects IMS - ArcEditor 2000 1996 - ArcView X-Emulation ArcIMS ArcGIS 9 - ArcEngine Windows Terminal Clients 1997 - ArcGIS Server 2004 Web Data Sources ArcInfo Shapefiles Spatial Database Engine Intelligent
    [Show full text]
  • UBS Release Notes Version 8.10
    Uniplex Release Notes Version 8.10 Manual version: 8.10 Document version: V1.0 COPYRIGHT NOTICE Copyright© 1987-1995 Uniplex Limited. All rights reserved. Unpublished - rights reserved under Copyright Laws. Licensed software and documentation. Use, copy and disclosure restricted by license agreement. ©Copyright 1989-1992, Bitstream Inc. Cambridge, MA. All rights reserved. U.S. Patent No. 5,009,435. ©Copyright 1991-1992, Bitstream Inc. Cambridge, MA. Portions copyright by Data General Corporation (1993) ©Gradient Technologies, Inc. 1991, 1992. ©Hewlett Packard 1988, 1990. Copyright© Harlequin Ltd. 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992. All rights reserved. ©Hewlett-Packard Company 1987-1993. All rights reserved. OpenMail (A.01.00) Copyright© Hewlett-Packard Company 1989, 1990, 1992. Portion Copyright Informix Software, Inc. IXI X.desktop Copyright© 1988-1993, IXI Limited, Cambridge, England. IXI Deskterm Copyright© 1988-1993, IXI Limited, Cambridge, England. Featuring MultiView DeskTerm Copyright© 1990-1992 JSB Computer Systems Ltd. Word for Word, Copyright, Mastersoft, Inc., 1986-1993. Tel: (602)-948-4888 Font Data copyright© The Monotype Corporation Plc 1989. All rights reserved. Copyright© 1990-1991, NBI, Inc. All rights reserved. Created using Netwise SystemTM software. Copyright 1984-1992 Soft-Art, Inc. All rights reserved. Copyrighted work incorporating TypeScalerTM, Copyright© Sun Microsystems Inc. 1989, 1987. All rights reserved. Copyright© VisionWare Ltd. 1989-1992. All Rights Reserved. ©1987-1993 XVT Software Inc. All rights reserved. Uniplex is a trademark of Redwood International Limited in the UK and other countries. onGO, Uniplex II PlusTM, Uniplex Advanced Office SystemTM, Uniplex Advanced GraphicsTM, Uniplex Business SoftwareTM, Uniplex DOSTM, Uniplex DatalinkTM and Uniplex WindowsTM are trademarks of Uniplex Limited. PostScript® is a registered trademark of Adobe Systems Inc.
    [Show full text]
  • A Ballista Retrospective
    Software Robustness Testing A Ballista Retrospective Phil Koopman [email protected] http://ballista.org With contributions from: Dan Siewiorek, Kobey DeVale John DeVale, Kim Fernsler, Dave Guttendorf, Nathan Kropp, Jiantao Pan, Charles Shelton, Ying Shi Institute for Complex Engineered Systems Overview Introduction • APIs aren’t robust (and people act as if they don’t want them to be robust!) Top 4 Reasons people give for ignoring robustness improvement • “My API is already robust, especially for easy problems” (it’s probably not) • “Robustness is impractical” (it is practical) • “Robust code will be too slow” (it need not be) • “We already know how to do it, thank you very much” (perhaps they don’t) Conclusions • The big future problem for “near-stationary” robustness isn’t technology -- it is awareness & training 2 Ballista Software Testing Overview SPECIFIED INPUT RESPONSE BEHAVIOR SPACE SPACE ROBUST SHOULD VAL I D OPERATION WORK INPUTS MO DULE REPRODUCIBLE UNDEFINED UNDER FAILURE TEST SHOULD INVALID INPUTS UNREPRODUCIBLE RETURN FAILURE ERROR Abstracts testing to the API/Data type level • Most test cases are exceptional • Test cases based on best-practice SW testing methodology 3 Ballista: Test Generation (fine grain testing) Tests developed per data type/subtype; scalable via composition 4 Initial Results: Most APIs Weren’t Robust Unix & Windows systems had poor robustness scores: • 24% to 48% of intentionally exceptional Unix tests yielded non-robust results • Found simple “system killer” programs in Unix, Win 95/98/ME, and WinCE
    [Show full text]
  • DG Users Worldwide to Demon Tration Contact: Impliementation of INFOS Migrate to U IX
    '2 ;> o C') c:: C') 1;1:1 o o -=- N ~ IC Wby wait? Get the fmancial aiIcl operational ...."...", in software migration and are a benefits of Open Systems now. plus U/FOS leading international upplier of Open improved functionality with ROBMS-Ievel Sy tem tool to the Data General transaction security - and make mas ive financial community. Our UBB Universal Bu ine savings on redevelopment and retraining. Basic product - nearly 5.000 copies sold to To obtain further detail and arrange a per onal date - has enabled DG users worldwide to demon tration contact: impliementation of INFOS migrate to U IX. And our powerful U/SQL TRA SOFT I C, 1899 Power Ferry Road. Universal Structured Query Language • smooth. rapid migration of your Suite 420, Marietta, GA 30067, USA. operate on a variety of COBOL. BASIC COBOL. Fortran and PUI application Tel: (404) 933 1965 Fax: (404) 933 3464 and ROBMS file type . TRA SOFT LTO , a h Hou e, Oatchet Road, • full INFOS functionality Slough, SL3 7LR, England. • automatic data migration The same - only better Tel: 0753 692332 (Int + 44 753 692332) • choice of AViiO and other major UNIXs With U/FOS you can achieve a mooth. rapid Fax : 0753 69425 I (Int + 44 753 69425 I) migration of your I FOS application to • added functionality and better U IX. and also utilise powerful additional utilities features - including better data compres ion. • API for third party software products better checkpointing and ROBMS-Ievel data TRAN integrity and recovery. SQL reporting i also Portability and Productivity Huge savings on redevelopment planned.
    [Show full text]
  • Arcims Metadata Services
    ArcIMS® Metadata Services ® An ESRI White Paper • May 2002 ESRI 380 New York St., Redlands, CA 92373-8100, USA • TEL 909-793-2853 • FAX 909-793-5953 • E-MAIL [email protected] • WEB www.esri.com Copyright © 2002 ESRI All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America. The information contained in this document is the exclusive property of ESRI. This work is protected under United States copyright law and other international copyright treaties and conventions. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying and recording, or by any information storage or retrieval system, except as expressly permitted in writing by ESRI. All requests should be sent to Attention: Contracts Manager, ESRI, 380 New York Street, Redlands, CA 92373-8100, USA. The information contained in this document is subject to change without notice. U.S. GOVERNMENT RESTRICTED/LIMITED RIGHTS Any software, documentation, and/or data delivered hereunder is subject to the terms of the License Agreement. In no event shall the U.S. Government acquire greater than RESTRICTED/LIMITED RIGHTS. At a minimum, use, duplication, or disclosure by the U.S. Government is subject to restrictions as set forth in FAR §52.227-14 Alternates I, II, and III (JUN 1987); FAR §52.227-19 (JUN 1987) and/or FAR §12.211/12.212 (Commercial Technical Data/Computer Software); and DFARS §252.227-7015 (NOV 1995) (Technical Data) and/or DFARS §227.7202 (Computer Software), as applicable. Contractor/Manufacturer is ESRI, 380 New York Street, Redlands, CA 92373- 8100, USA.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction to UNIX What Is UNIX? Why UNIX? Brief History of UNIX Early UNIX History UNIX Variants
    What is UNIX? A modern computer operating system Introduction to UNIX Operating system: “a program that acts as an intermediary between a user of the computer and the computer hardware” CS 2204 Software that manages your computer’s resources (files, programs, disks, network, …) Class meeting 1 e.g. Windows, MacOS Modern: features for stability, flexibility, multiple users and programs, configurability, etc. *Notes by Doug Bowman and other members of the CS faculty at Virginia Tech. Copyright 2001-2003. (C) Doug Bowman, Virginia Tech, 2001- 2 Why UNIX? Brief history of UNIX Used in many scientific and industrial settings Ken Thompson & Dennis Richie Huge number of free and well-written originally developed the earliest software programs versions of UNIX at Bell Labs for Open-source OS internal use in 1970s Internet servers and services run on UNIX Borrowed best ideas from other Oss Largely hardware-independent Meant for programmers and computer Based on standards experts Meant to run on “mini computers” (C) Doug Bowman, Virginia Tech, 2001- 3 (C) Doug Bowman, Virginia Tech, 2001- 4 Early UNIX History UNIX variants Thompson also rewrote the operating system Two main threads of development: in high level language of his own design Berkeley software distribution (BSD) which he called B. Unix System Laboratories System V Sun: SunOS, Solaris The B language lacked many features and Ritchie decided to design a successor to B GNU: Linux (many flavors) which he called C. SGI: Irix They then rewrote UNIX in the C FreeBSD programming language to aid in portability. Hewlett-Packard: HP-UX Apple: OS X (Darwin) … (C) Doug Bowman, Virginia Tech, 2001- 5 (C) Doug Bowman, Virginia Tech, 2001- 6 1 Layers in the UNIX System UNIX Structure User Interface The kernel is the core of the UNIX Library Interface Users system, controlling the system Standard Utility Programs hardware and performing various low- (shell, editors, compilers, etc.) System Interface calls User Mode level functions.
    [Show full text]
  • Absolute BSD—The Ultimate Guide to Freebsd Table of Contents Absolute BSD—The Ultimate Guide to Freebsd
    Absolute BSD—The Ultimate Guide to FreeBSD Table of Contents Absolute BSD—The Ultimate Guide to FreeBSD............................................................................1 Dedication..........................................................................................................................................3 Foreword............................................................................................................................................4 Introduction........................................................................................................................................5 What Is FreeBSD?...................................................................................................................5 How Did FreeBSD Get Here?..................................................................................................5 The BSD License: BSD Goes Public.......................................................................................6 The Birth of Modern FreeBSD.................................................................................................6 FreeBSD Development............................................................................................................7 Committers.........................................................................................................................7 Contributors........................................................................................................................8 Users..................................................................................................................................8
    [Show full text]
  • Aviion SERVERS and WORKSTATIONS PLUS
    "Great products ••• fantastic support!" Buzz Van Santvoord, VP of Operations, Plow & Hearth, Inc. Buzz Van Santvoord, Plow & Hearth When you've got 100 telesales reps VP of Operations, and Peter Rice, processing 6,500 orders a day your President, with a selection of items computer system had better work! from their catalogue. Virginia ba ed, Plow & Hearth, Inc. i a $30 million mail order company, specializing in product for country living. Mailing over 20 million catalogue a year and with an e tabli hed ba e of over 1 million cu tomer , it computer y tems are critical to the onver ion of the AOS / VS OBOL program to ACUCOBOL company' ucce and growth. commenced in June and the ystem went live on a Data General A VUON 8500 in September, in plenty of time for the Chri tma ru h. To meet it pecific need Plow & Hearth had inve ted The AIM plu AVUON combination gave the bu ine a dramatic more than $500,000, over a period of 13 year , developing a boo t: "The much fa ter re pon e time improved morale and Data General MY-ba ed y tern in AOS{VS COBOL with 300 increa ed our tele ale capacity without adding a body, and the program and 70 INFOS databa e . But by early 1995 the extra order gained gave u our be t Chri tma ever." company realized that their MY9600 didn't have the capacity to make it through the bu y Chri tma ea on. Expert migration consultants Buzz Van Santvoord, Vice Pre ident of Operation explains: Thi ca e tudy illu trate how Tran oft' AIM offering i more "A move to Open Sy tern wa our preferred strategic direction.
    [Show full text]
  • Programming Languages, Database Language SQL, Graphics, GOSIP
    b fl ^ b 2 5 I AH1Q3 NISTIR 4951 (Supersedes NISTIR 4871) VALIDATED PRODUCTS LIST 1992 No. 4 PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES DATABASE LANGUAGE SQL GRAPHICS Judy B. Kailey GOSIP Editor POSIX COMPUTER SECURITY U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Technology Administration National Institute of Standards and Technology Computer Systems Laboratory Software Standards Validation Group Gaithersburg, MD 20899 100 . U56 4951 1992 NIST (Supersedes NISTIR 4871) VALIDATED PRODUCTS LIST 1992 No. 4 PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES DATABASE LANGUAGE SQL GRAPHICS Judy B. Kailey GOSIP Editor POSIX COMPUTER SECURITY U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Technology Administration National Institute of Standards and Technology Computer Systems Laboratory Software Standards Validation Group Gaithersburg, MD 20899 October 1992 (Supersedes July 1992 issue) U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE Barbara Hackman Franklin, Secretary TECHNOLOGY ADMINISTRATION Robert M. White, Under Secretary for Technology NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF STANDARDS AND TECHNOLOGY John W. Lyons, Director - ;,’; '^'i -; _ ^ '’>.£. ; '':k ' ' • ; <tr-f'' "i>: •v'k' I m''M - i*i^ a,)»# ' :,• 4 ie®®;'’’,' ;SJ' v: . I 'i^’i i 'OS -.! FOREWORD The Validated Products List is a collection of registers describing implementations of Federal Information Processing Standards (FTPS) that have been validated for conformance to FTPS. The Validated Products List also contains information about the organizations, test methods and procedures that support the validation programs for the FTPS identified in this document. The Validated Products List is updated quarterly. iii ' ;r,<R^v a;-' i-'r^ . /' ^'^uffoo'*^ ''vCJIt<*bjteV sdT : Jr /' i^iL'.JO 'j,-/5l ':. ;urj ->i: • ' *?> ^r:nT^^'Ad JlSid Uawfoof^ fa«Di)itbiI»V ,, ‘ isbt^u ri il .r^^iytsrH n 'V TABLE OF CONTENTS 1.
    [Show full text]
  • Quick-Start Guide
    Quick-Start Guide ArcGIS® Desktop 9.3 1 UNIX® (ArcInfo® Workstation) on the DVD setup menu located in the lower left-hand corner for more 4 5 information. ✱ Mount the ArcInfo Workstation installation media and CD to the directory Prerequisites for your UNIX platform. ✱ Browse to the saved license le, complete the license manager setup. Install ArcGIS Desktop or ArcInfo Workstation More Information about ArcGIS ✱ ✱ Open the install_guide.pdf and follow the instructions under “Installing the Before restarting the computer, plug in the hardware key and wait for ✱ ® ™ A single source of information and assistance for ArcGIS products is ✱ If you are an existing user, your current license le will work with the ArcInfo license manager” to install the license manager. Windows to install the Hardware key driver. ArcGIS Desktop (ArcView , ArcEditor , ArcInfo available via the ESRI Resource Centers Web site at http://resources. updatedversion of the ArcGIS® License Manager. You will need to install ✱ From the 9.x $ARCHOME/sysgen directory, run “./lmutil lmhostid” to obtain ✱ Restart the machine once the driver installation is complete. [Concurrent Use]) esri.com. Use the Resource Centers Web site as your portal to ArcGIS the license manager included on the ArcGIS Desktop media. resources such as Help, forums, blogs, samples, and developer support. the host ID for this machine. ✱ If you have trouble starting the license manager, refer to “Troubleshooting ✱ Insert the ArcGIS Desktop installation media. If auto-run is enabled, a DVD ✱ Prior to installing, please review the system requirements. See ✱ Use this host ID to request the license le from Customer Service at License Errors on Windows” in the License Manager Reference Guide, setup menu will appear.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction
    CS307 Operating Systems Introduction Fan Wu Department of Computer Science and Engineering Shanghai Jiao Tong University Spring 2020 Operating Systems Operating Systems 2 Operating Systems UNIX-family: BSD(Berkeley Software Distribution), System-V, GNU/Linux, MINIX, Nachos, OS X, iOS BSD-family: FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD System-V-family: AIX, HP-UX, IRIX, Solaris Linux-family: Red Hat, Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, openSUSE, Linux Mint, Google's Android, WebOS, Meego MS-DOS, Microsoft Windows, Windows Mobile, Win-CE, WP8 AmigaOS Symbian, MeeGo Google Chrome OS OS/2 XrossMediaBar(XMB) for PS3, Orbis OS for PS4 Input Output System for Wii Tiny-OS, LynxOS, QNX, VxWorks Operating Systems 3 Four Components of a Computer System People, machines, other computers Application programs define the ways in which theSystem system programs resources are arecomputer used to software solve the computingdesigned to problems operate theof thecomputer users hardware and toControls provide and a platformcoordinates for runninguse of hardware application among programsvarious applications and users provides basic computing resources Operating Systems 4 Computer System Structure Hardware – provides basic computing resources CPU, memory, I/O devices Operating system – Controls and coordinates use of hardware among various applications and users System programs – are computer software designed to operate the computer hardware and to provide a platform for running application programs BIOS and device drivers Application programs – define the ways in
    [Show full text]