If you missed yesterday’s @COMMONug iNSIGHT session, it will be available to members for 30 days. Tune in to the discussion on cloud migration assessment, prep, strategies and more. #IBMi #PowerSystems #iNSIGHT21

If you missed yesterday’s @COMMONug iNSIGHT session, it will be available to members for 30 days. Tune in to the discussion on cloud migration assessment, prep, strategies and more. #IBMi #PowerSystems #iNSIGHT21 sched.co/kQmK pic.twitter.com/RZPOAUXF1b

– Datanational (@Datanational)06:05 – Jul 30, 2021

A couple of days ago someone told me he was using NFS share on #IBMi mounted on Linux jumpserver to upload data on Azure Storage , but performance was bad. I suggested to use SSHFS and later he told me this was much faster. Still thinking on uses for SSHFS on backups #ibmioss

A couple of days ago someone told me he was using NFS share on #IBMi mounted on Linux jumpserver to upload data on Azure Storage , but performance was bad.
I suggested to use SSHFS and later he told me this was much faster.
Still thinking on uses for SSHFS on backups#ibmioss

– Hector Servadac (@hserva)22:54 – Jul 29, 2021

In The API World, Nobody Knows You Are An IBM i

One of the earliest memes of the early years of the commercial Internet was captured in a famous cartoon in The New Yorker magazine penned by Peter Steiner and showing a dog at a computer, which quipped: “On the Internet, nobody knows you’re a dog.”

Somewhere back in the archive – it was in September 1997, which is not online because we were a paper, subscription publication for the first seven years of The Four Hundred – we did a riff on this meme with a lead essay called, On The Net, No One Knows You Are An AS/400.

The post In The API World, Nobody Knows You Are An IBM i appeared first on IT Jungle.

Verified by MonsterInsights