Webinar Automating IBM i Modernization: From Legacy RPG to Procedures with Transformer Microservices ARCAD Software

​Discover how to automate the transformation of complex IBM i applications. Using ARCAD Transformer Microservices, our experts will demonstrate how to refactor monolithic RPG code into modular, reusable procedures, making your legacy systems more agile and easier to integrate with modern web and mobile applications.Right from your IDE, you can now automatically identify similar code patterns, generate reusable procedures, convert variables into parameters, and replace redundant code with a procedure call.Modular transformation: Convert your proven IBM i applications into a modular set of functions ready for use as web services.Secure access: Use existing DB2 database logic via web and mobile applications.Enhanced connectivity: Connect existing web applications to IBM i application functionality.Open your IBM i to a modern digital future… Read More 

ARCAD Transformer Microservices ARCAD Software

​Discover the basics of microservices, the benefits of adopting them, the role of RESTful APIs in connecting microservices, and ARCAD Transformer Microservices, a tool that transforms your RPG enterprise applications into modern n-tier architecture effortlessly for organizations dealing with modernization on IBM i.Do not hesitate to contact our ARCAD team for a free trial version or a demo. Read More 

Slash Your EDI Costs: A Trucking Company’s Guide to Predictable Pricing Daniel Magid

​[[{“value”:”The other day, I was chatting with a logistics company CEO who’d just completed a major merger. He was excited about the growth opportunities but had one big concern: “Our EDI costs are out of control,” he confided. “Every time we onboard a new customer or need to make a change to a current trading
The post Slash Your EDI Costs: A Trucking Company’s Guide to Predictable Pricing appeared first on Eradani.”}]] Read More 

Huge housing, retail complex in the works for former IBM campus in Rochester

​The undeveloped land around the existing campus, much of it grassy fields and woodland, has been a point of discussion for years. In 2015, prior to IRG purchasing the property, the city had been in talks with IBM about buying the property for park space. Those discussions never materialized, however.Vlaeminck said IBM had intentionally left large swaths of the site undeveloped for security reasons, even building small hills around the site to block lines of sight to the facility.At its peak in the early 1990s, IBM had 8,100 employees working at the Rochester campus, a number that has dwindled to about a quarter of that today.“Because the utility demand IBM once had was so large, so dramatic, we can develop the additional 200 acres without really posing a new utility demand,” Vlaeminck said.The proposal from IRG would not affect any of the existing 3.1 million square feet of office and warehouse space on the campus. That space is now used by a mix of tenants, including IBM, which leases back about a third of the complex. Read More 

Verified by MonsterInsights