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1994 Hearings on Software Patents
United States Patent and Trademark Office Public Hearing on Use of the Patent System to Protect Software-Related Inventions Transcript of Proceedings Wednesday, January 26, 1994 Thursday, January 27, 1994 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Before Bruce A. Lehman Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks Location: San Jose Convention Center 408 Almaden Avenue San Jose, California UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE Public Hearing on Patent Protection for Software-Related Inventions San Jose, California -- January 26-27, 1994 Table of Participants Before: Bruce A. Lehman Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks United States Patent and Trademark Office The Panel: Ginger Lew General Counsel-Designate United States Department of Commerce Lawrence Goffney Assistant Commissioner for Patents-Designate United States Patent and Trademark Office Micheal K. Kirk Assistant Commissioner for External Affairs United States Patent and Trademark Office Jeffrey P. Kushan Attorney-Advisor United States Patent and Trademark Office Recording Technicians: Karl Henderscheid Support Office Services 52 Second Street, Third Floor San Francisco, CA 94104 (415) 391-4578 Trascriber: Milton Hare Rogershare Transcribers 541 Maud Avenue San Leandro, CA 94577 (510) 357-8220 - ii - UNITED STATES PATENT AND TRADEMARK OFFICE Public Hearing on Patent Protection for Software-Related Inventions San Jose, California -- January 26-27, 1994 Witnesses January 26, 1994 January 27, 1994 Mr. Clark Mr. Fiddler VideoDiscovery Wind River Systems Mr. Poppa Mr. Warren StorageTek Autodesk, Inc. Mr. Ryan Ms. O'Hare Intellectual Property Owners, Inc. Mr. Glenn Mr. LeFaivre Intellectual Property Section of the State Bar of California Apple Computer Mr. -
Systems Management Performance Reference Information 7.1
IBM IBM i Systems management Performance reference information 7.1 IBM IBM i Systems management Performance reference information 7.1 Note Before using this information and the product it supports, read the information in “Notices,” on page 267. This edition applies to IBM i 7.1 (product number 5770-SS1) and to all subsequent releases and modifications until otherwise indicated in new editions. This version does not run on all reduced instruction set computer (RISC) models nor does it run on CISC models. © Copyright IBM Corporation 1998, 2010. US Government Users Restricted Rights – Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract with IBM Corp. Contents Reference information for Performance 1 Disk Watcher data files: QAPYDWSTAT ... 237 Collection Services data files ......... 1 Disk Watcher data files: QAPYDWTDER ... 239 Collection Services data files containing time Disk Watcher data files: QAPYDWTRC .... 240 interval data ............. 1 Data files: File abbreviations ........ 244 Collection Services data files: Field data for CL commands for performance ....... 244 configuration database files........ 221 Intelligent Agents ............ 247 Collection Services database files: Field data for Intelligent Agent concepts ........ 247 trace database files .......... 229 Developing agents........... 250 Collection Services data files: System category Set up your agent environment ...... 252 and file relationships .......... 229 Managing agents ........... 260 Collection Services data files: Task type extender 231 Disk -
Transaction Systems Architects, Inc. 2006 Annual Report
Transaction Systems Architects, Inc. 2006 Annual Report Transaction Systems Architects, Inc. 120 Broadway Suite 3350 New York, New York 10271 www.tsainc.com tsa_Cover.indd 1 4/13/07 11:48:16 PM Transaction Systems Architects, Inc. is a global provider of software and services for electronic payments. The company supports more Board of Directors Principal Offi ces than 800 customers in the fi nance, retail and transaction processing industries. Harlan F. Seymour Corporate Headquarters Chairman of the Board – Transaction Systems Architects, Inc. Transaction Systems Architects, United States – New York, New York Customers use TSA solutions to: Principal – HFS LLC Offi ces Process transactions generated at ATMs, merchant point-of-sale devices, mobile devices, Philip G. Heasley Argentina Australia Bahrain Internet commerce sites and bank branches President and Chief Executive Offi cer – Transaction Systems Architects, Inc. Brazil Canada France Germany Greece India Process high-value payments and enable Web banking on behalf of corporate clients Roger K. Alexander Ireland Italy Japan Detect and prevent debit and credit card fraud, merchant fraud and money laundering Chief Executive Offi cer – euroConex Technologies Ltd Korea Malaysia Mexico The Netherlands Romania Russia Authorize checks written in retail locations John D. Curtis Singapore South Africa Spain Establish frequent shopper programs Attorney United Arab Emirates United Kingdom United States Automate transaction settlement, card management and claims processing Jim D. Kever Issue and manage applications on smart cards Partner – Voyent Partners LLC Facilitate communication, data movement, transaction processing and systems monitoring John M. Shay, Jr. Investor Information across heterogeneous computing systems President – Fairway Consulting LLC A copy of the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended John E. -
Computing Machinery
Highly Available Systems for Database Applications WON KIM IBM Research Laboratory, San Jose, Californm 95193 As users entrust more and more of their applications to computer systems, the need for systems that are continuously operational (24 hours per day) has become even greater. This paper presents a survey and analysis of representat~%e architectures and techniques that have been developed for constructing highly available systems for database applications. It then proposes a design of a distributed software subsystem that can serve as a unified framework for constructing database application systems that meet various requirements for high availability. Categories and Subject Descriptors: A.1 [General Literature]: Introductory and Survey; C.1.2 [Processor Architectures]: Multiple Data Stream Architectures (Multiprocessors)--interconnection architectures; C.4 [Computer Systems Organization]: Performance of Systems--reliability, availability, and serviceability; H.2.4 [Database Management]: Systems--distributed systems, transaction processing General Terms: Reliability Additional Key Words and Phrases: Database concurrency control and recovery, relational database INTRODUCTION ager to retrieve and update records in the database. In this paper we examine major hardware A transaction is a collection of reads and and software aspects of highly available writes against a database that is treated as systems. Its scope is limited to those sys- a unit [Gray 1978]. If a transaction com- tems designed for database applications. pletes, its effect becomes permanently re- Database applications require multiple corded in the database; otherwise, no trace paths from the processor to the disks, which of its effect remains in the database. To gives rise to some difficult issues of system support the notion of a transaction, undo architecture and engineering. -
C:\Andrzej\PDF\ABC Nagrywania P³yt CD\1 Strona.Cdr
IDZ DO PRZYK£ADOWY ROZDZIA£ SPIS TREFCI Wielka encyklopedia komputerów KATALOG KSI¥¯EK Autor: Alan Freedman KATALOG ONLINE T³umaczenie: Micha³ Dadan, Pawe³ Gonera, Pawe³ Koronkiewicz, Rados³aw Meryk, Piotr Pilch ZAMÓW DRUKOWANY KATALOG ISBN: 83-7361-136-3 Tytu³ orygina³u: ComputerDesktop Encyclopedia Format: B5, stron: 1118 TWÓJ KOSZYK DODAJ DO KOSZYKA Wspó³czesna informatyka to nie tylko komputery i oprogramowanie. To setki technologii, narzêdzi i urz¹dzeñ umo¿liwiaj¹cych wykorzystywanie komputerów CENNIK I INFORMACJE w ró¿nych dziedzinach ¿ycia, jak: poligrafia, projektowanie, tworzenie aplikacji, sieci komputerowe, gry, kinowe efekty specjalne i wiele innych. Rozwój technologii ZAMÓW INFORMACJE komputerowych, trwaj¹cy stosunkowo krótko, wniós³ do naszego ¿ycia wiele nowych O NOWOFCIACH mo¿liwoYci. „Wielka encyklopedia komputerów” to kompletne kompendium wiedzy na temat ZAMÓW CENNIK wspó³czesnej informatyki. Jest lektur¹ obowi¹zkow¹ dla ka¿dego, kto chce rozumieæ dynamiczny rozwój elektroniki i technologii informatycznych. Opisuje wszystkie zagadnienia zwi¹zane ze wspó³czesn¹ informatyk¹; przedstawia zarówno jej historiê, CZYTELNIA jak i trendy rozwoju. Zawiera informacje o firmach, których produkty zrewolucjonizowa³y FRAGMENTY KSI¥¯EK ONLINE wspó³czesny Ywiat, oraz opisy technologii, sprzêtu i oprogramowania. Ka¿dy, niezale¿nie od stopnia zaawansowania swojej wiedzy, znajdzie w niej wyczerpuj¹ce wyjaYnienia interesuj¹cych go terminów z ró¿nych bran¿ dzisiejszej informatyki. • Komunikacja pomiêdzy systemami informatycznymi i sieci komputerowe • Grafika komputerowa i technologie multimedialne • Internet, WWW, poczta elektroniczna, grupy dyskusyjne • Komputery osobiste — PC i Macintosh • Komputery typu mainframe i stacje robocze • Tworzenie oprogramowania i systemów komputerowych • Poligrafia i reklama • Komputerowe wspomaganie projektowania • Wirusy komputerowe Wydawnictwo Helion JeYli szukasz ]ród³a informacji o technologiach informatycznych, chcesz poznaæ ul. -
Bladecenter Interoperability Guide
Front cover BladeCenter Interoperability Guide Quick reference for BladeCenter Includes internal components and interoperability external connectivity Covers software compatibility Discusses storage interoperability Ilya Krutov David Watts Note: Before using this information and the product it supports, read the information in “Notices” on page iii. Last update on 24 February 2015 This edition applies to: BladeCenter E BladeCenter H BladeCenter HT BladeCenter S BladeCenter HS12 type 8028 BladeCenter HS22 BladeCenter HS22V BladeCenter HS23 (E5-2600) BladeCenter HS23 (E5-2600 v2) BladeCenter HS23E BladeCenter HX5 BladeCenter PS700/701/702 BladeCenter PS703/704 © Copyright Lenovo 2015. All rights reserved. Note to U.S. Government Users Restricted Rights -- Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract Contents Notices . iii Trademarks . iv Preface . .v Authors. .v Comments welcome. vi Do you have the latest version?. vi Chapter 1. Chassis interoperability. 1 1.1 Server to chassis compatibility . 2 1.1.1 HS22 chassis support . 3 1.1.2 HS22V chassis support. 4 1.1.3 HS23 (E5-2600) chassis support . 5 1.1.4 HS23 (E5-2600 v2) chassis support . 6 1.1.5 HS23E chassis support. 7 1.1.6 HX5 chassis support . 8 1.1.7 PS700 chassis support . 9 1.2 I/O module to chassis interoperability . 10 1.2.1 SAS, InfiniBand, Pass-thru, and interconnect modules interoperability . 10 1.2.2 Ethernet I/O module interoperability . 11 1.2.3 Fibre Channel I/O module interoperability. 12 1.3 I/O module to adapter interoperability . 13 1.3.1 I/O module bay to adapter mappings . 13 1.3.2 Ethernet I/O modules and adapters . -
IBM System X and Bladecenter Business Partner Guidebook Titles of Interest
July 2011 CLICK HERE to check for updates Your Road Map to Success with IBM IBM System x System x and and BladeCenter BladeCenter Business Partner Guidebook Over 100,000 copies downloaded! Edited by Jim Hoskins IBM System x and BladeCenter Business Partner Guidebook Titles of Interest More IBM Titles of Interest • IBM Information Infrastructure Business Partner Guidebook • Exploring IBM SOA Technology & Practice • Exploring IBM Accelerators for WebSphere Portal Top Internet Business Titles • 101 Ways to Promote Your Web Site • 3G Marketing on the Internet • Protect Your Great Ideas for Free! • And many more… For more information, visit us at maxpress.com or email us at [email protected]. IBM System x and BladeCenter Business Partner Guidebook Twentieth Edition Your Road Map to Success with IBM System x and BladeCenter Edited by Jim Hoskins (version 20.0e) 605 Silverthorn Road Gulf Breeze, FL 32561 maxpress.com Notices Production Manager: Jacquie Wallace Cover Designer: Lauren Smith This publication is designed to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. It is sold with the understanding that the publisher is not engaged in rendering professional services. If legal, accounting, medical, psychological, or any other expert assistance is required, the services of a competent professional person should be sought. ADAPTED FROM A DECLARATION OF PRIN- CIPLES OF A JOINT COMMITTEE OF THE AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION AND PUBLISHERS. Copyright 2011 by Maximum Press. All rights reserved. Published simultaneously in Canada. Reproduction or translation of any part of this work beyond that permitted by Section 107 or 108 of the 1976 United States Copyright Act without the permission of the copyright owner is unlawful. -
IBM Z Connectivity Handbook
Front cover IBM Z Connectivity Handbook Octavian Lascu John Troy Anna Shugol Frank Packheiser Kazuhiro Nakajima Paul Schouten Hervey Kamga Jannie Houlbjerg Bo XU Redbooks IBM Redbooks IBM Z Connectivity Handbook August 2020 SG24-5444-20 Note: Before using this information and the product it supports, read the information in “Notices” on page vii. Twentyfirst Edition (August 2020) This edition applies to connectivity options available on the IBM z15 (M/T 8561), IBM z15 (M/T 8562), IBM z14 (M/T 3906), IBM z14 Model ZR1 (M/T 3907), IBM z13, and IBM z13s. © Copyright International Business Machines Corporation 2020. All rights reserved. Note to U.S. Government Users Restricted Rights -- Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract with IBM Corp. Contents Notices . vii Trademarks . viii Preface . ix Authors. ix Now you can become a published author, too! . xi Comments welcome. xi Stay connected to IBM Redbooks . xi Chapter 1. Introduction. 1 1.1 I/O channel overview. 2 1.1.1 I/O hardware infrastructure . 2 1.1.2 I/O connectivity features . 3 1.2 FICON Express . 4 1.3 zHyperLink Express . 5 1.4 Open Systems Adapter-Express. 6 1.5 HiperSockets. 7 1.6 Parallel Sysplex and coupling links . 8 1.7 Shared Memory Communications. 9 1.8 I/O feature support . 10 1.9 Special-purpose feature support . 12 1.9.1 Crypto Express features . 12 1.9.2 Flash Express feature . 12 1.9.3 zEDC Express feature . 13 Chapter 2. Channel subsystem overview . 15 2.1 CSS description . 16 2.1.1 CSS elements . -
MTS on Wikipedia Snapshot Taken 9 January 2011
MTS on Wikipedia Snapshot taken 9 January 2011 PDF generated using the open source mwlib toolkit. See http://code.pediapress.com/ for more information. PDF generated at: Sun, 09 Jan 2011 13:08:01 UTC Contents Articles Michigan Terminal System 1 MTS system architecture 17 IBM System/360 Model 67 40 MAD programming language 46 UBC PLUS 55 Micro DBMS 57 Bruce Arden 58 Bernard Galler 59 TSS/360 60 References Article Sources and Contributors 64 Image Sources, Licenses and Contributors 65 Article Licenses License 66 Michigan Terminal System 1 Michigan Terminal System The MTS welcome screen as seen through a 3270 terminal emulator. Company / developer University of Michigan and 7 other universities in the U.S., Canada, and the UK Programmed in various languages, mostly 360/370 Assembler Working state Historic Initial release 1967 Latest stable release 6.0 / 1988 (final) Available language(s) English Available programming Assembler, FORTRAN, PL/I, PLUS, ALGOL W, Pascal, C, LISP, SNOBOL4, COBOL, PL360, languages(s) MAD/I, GOM (Good Old Mad), APL, and many more Supported platforms IBM S/360-67, IBM S/370 and successors History of IBM mainframe operating systems On early mainframe computers: • GM OS & GM-NAA I/O 1955 • BESYS 1957 • UMES 1958 • SOS 1959 • IBSYS 1960 • CTSS 1961 On S/360 and successors: • BOS/360 1965 • TOS/360 1965 • TSS/360 1967 • MTS 1967 • ORVYL 1967 • MUSIC 1972 • MUSIC/SP 1985 • DOS/360 and successors 1966 • DOS/VS 1972 • DOS/VSE 1980s • VSE/SP late 1980s • VSE/ESA 1991 • z/VSE 2005 Michigan Terminal System 2 • OS/360 and successors -
Systems Management Management Central 7.1
IBM IBM i Systems management Management Central 7.1 IBM IBM i Systems management Management Central 7.1 Note Before using this information and the product it supports, read the information in “Notices,” on page 49. This edition applies to IBM i 7.1 (product number 5770-SS1) and to all subsequent releases and modifications until otherwise indicated in new editions. This version does not run on all reduced instruction set computer (RISC) models nor does it run on CISC models. © Copyright IBM Corporation 2002, 2010. US Government Users Restricted Rights – Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract with IBM Corp. Contents Management Central ......... 1 Working with systems with partitions .... 36 What's new for IBM i 7.1 .......... 1 Running commands with Management Central 36 PDF files for Management Central ....... 1 Packaging and sending objects with Management Getting started with Management Central .... 2 Central ............... 37 Before you begin ............ 2 Packaging and distribution considerations ... 38 Installing Management Central ....... 5 Managing users and groups with Management Setting up the central system ........ 7 Central ............... 40 Management Central plug-ins ....... 14 Sharing with other users in Management Central 42 Troubleshooting Management Central Synchronizing date and time values ..... 43 connections ............. 14 Synchronizing functions ......... 44 Working with Management Central monitors ... 17 Scheduling tasks or jobs with Management Management collection objects ....... 18 Central scheduler ........... 44 Job monitors and Collection Services ..... 19 Related information for Management Central ... 46 Special considerations .......... 21 Creating a new monitor ......... 22 Appendix. Notices .......... 49 Viewing monitor results ......... 33 Programming interface information ...... 51 Resetting triggered threshold for a monitor ... 33 Trademarks ............. -
Work Management
IBM i 7.3 Systems management Work management IBM Note Before using this information and the product it supports, read the information in “Notices” on page 197. This document may contain references to Licensed Internal Code. Licensed Internal Code is Machine Code and is licensed to you under the terms of the IBM License Agreement for Machine Code. © Copyright International Business Machines Corporation 2004, 2015. US Government Users Restricted Rights – Use, duplication or disclosure restricted by GSA ADP Schedule Contract with IBM Corp. Contents Work management................................................................................................ 1 PDF file for Work management....................................................................................................................1 What's new for IBM i 7.3..............................................................................................................................2 Introduction to work management..............................................................................................................2 Your system as a business..................................................................................................................... 2 A job's life................................................................................................................................................3 Submitting a job................................................................................................................................ 4 The -
CA XCOM Data Transport for UNIX and Linux Overview Guide
CA XCOM™ Data Transport® for UNIX and Linux Overview Guide r11.5 Second Edition This documentation and any related computer software help programs (hereinafter referred to as the “Documentation”) is for the end user’s informational purposes only and is subject to change or withdrawal by CA at any time. This Documentation may not be copied, transferred, reproduced, disclosed, modified or duplicated, in whole or in part, without the prior written consent of CA. This Documentation is confidential and proprietary information of CA and protected by the copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. Notwithstanding the foregoing, licensed users may print a reasonable number of copies of the documentation for their own internal use, and may make one copy of the related software as reasonably required for back-up and disaster recovery purposes, provided that all CA copyright notices and legends are affixed to each reproduced copy. Only authorized employees, consultants, or agents of the user who are bound by the provisions of the license for the product are permitted to have access to such copies. The right to print copies of the documentation and to make a copy of the related software is limited to the period during which the applicable license for the Product remains in full force and effect. Should the license terminate for any reason, it shall be the user’s responsibility to certify in writing to CA that all copies and partial copies of the Documentation have been returned to CA or destroyed. EXCEPT AS OTHERWISE STATED IN THE APPLICABLE LICENSE AGREEMENT, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, CA PROVIDES THIS DOCUMENTATION “AS IS” WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, INCLUDING WITHOUT LIMITATION, ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR NONINFRINGEMENT.