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Schools still teach COBOL!

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  • E Offline
    E Offline
    EHaskins
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    I've been looking into Computer Science and Software Engineering schools lately, and I couldn't believe it when I saw that UW-Plattville teaches COBOL as part of their Comp Sci BS. Course description: Programming in COBOL To develop an understanding of and provide practice in the use of proper strategies and techniques for business program design and development. To develop ability to apply the COBOL language to implement problem solutions. To gain the background for further study of software design and computer programming in a business environment. Emphasis on structured programming and program style. AND CICS Application Programming An introduction to CICS command-level programming using COBOL. Techniques to design and develop online application programs with CICS, a data communication system to maintain and access files and databases AND Applications in Information Systems Applications of computer programming and system development concepts, principles and practices to a comprehensive system development project. A team approach is used to design and develop a realistic system of moderate complexity. Also includes coverage of advanced features of the COBOL language. Most of the other schools I looked into used some combination of C, C++, Java, .net, and sometimes optional courses dedicated to the history of languages. Does anyone still use COBOL in business? I mean is this really what people go to school for? Original source, left column about 1/3 down.

    Total geek! :)

    B H M P R 8 Replies Last reply
    0
    • E EHaskins

      I've been looking into Computer Science and Software Engineering schools lately, and I couldn't believe it when I saw that UW-Plattville teaches COBOL as part of their Comp Sci BS. Course description: Programming in COBOL To develop an understanding of and provide practice in the use of proper strategies and techniques for business program design and development. To develop ability to apply the COBOL language to implement problem solutions. To gain the background for further study of software design and computer programming in a business environment. Emphasis on structured programming and program style. AND CICS Application Programming An introduction to CICS command-level programming using COBOL. Techniques to design and develop online application programs with CICS, a data communication system to maintain and access files and databases AND Applications in Information Systems Applications of computer programming and system development concepts, principles and practices to a comprehensive system development project. A team approach is used to design and develop a realistic system of moderate complexity. Also includes coverage of advanced features of the COBOL language. Most of the other schools I looked into used some combination of C, C++, Java, .net, and sometimes optional courses dedicated to the history of languages. Does anyone still use COBOL in business? I mean is this really what people go to school for? Original source, left column about 1/3 down.

      Total geek! :)

      B Offline
      B Offline
      Bert delaVega
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      EHaskins wrote:

      Does anyone still use COBOL in business

      Most of the Fortune 500 companies do. Along with Assembler and many other ancient languages, C included, on big boxes. None of it's a career path by any stretch. I could see them using it as a teaching language (just like I was taught Pascal and never used it in the real world) for concepts. The pseudo-conversational nature of CICS isn't that different than a web client. Hopefully these courses are introductory level just to give a basis to expand upon later. If they're not, then run. Run away fast.

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • E EHaskins

        I've been looking into Computer Science and Software Engineering schools lately, and I couldn't believe it when I saw that UW-Plattville teaches COBOL as part of their Comp Sci BS. Course description: Programming in COBOL To develop an understanding of and provide practice in the use of proper strategies and techniques for business program design and development. To develop ability to apply the COBOL language to implement problem solutions. To gain the background for further study of software design and computer programming in a business environment. Emphasis on structured programming and program style. AND CICS Application Programming An introduction to CICS command-level programming using COBOL. Techniques to design and develop online application programs with CICS, a data communication system to maintain and access files and databases AND Applications in Information Systems Applications of computer programming and system development concepts, principles and practices to a comprehensive system development project. A team approach is used to design and develop a realistic system of moderate complexity. Also includes coverage of advanced features of the COBOL language. Most of the other schools I looked into used some combination of C, C++, Java, .net, and sometimes optional courses dedicated to the history of languages. Does anyone still use COBOL in business? I mean is this really what people go to school for? Original source, left column about 1/3 down.

        Total geek! :)

        H Offline
        H Offline
        Harvey Saayman
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        i know for a fact that banking systems here in South Africa are cobol. its been like that for ages, one of the banks here give FREE training on cobol programming twice a year i think, because its cheaper to train people to use an old language and then employ them than to rewrite the systems in a newer one. something else that surprised me while working as a casual for an outsource IT company that support this banks computers is that the dual chip quad core servers in every branch runs on.... wait for it... OS2! and the tellers terminals are dummies that "download" their "OS" from the server upon booting. weird to think that our money is managed by programs as old as the earth :D

        Harvey Saayman - South Africa Junior Developer .Net, C#, SQL

        you.suck = (you.passion != Programming)

        M S 2 Replies Last reply
        0
        • E EHaskins

          I've been looking into Computer Science and Software Engineering schools lately, and I couldn't believe it when I saw that UW-Plattville teaches COBOL as part of their Comp Sci BS. Course description: Programming in COBOL To develop an understanding of and provide practice in the use of proper strategies and techniques for business program design and development. To develop ability to apply the COBOL language to implement problem solutions. To gain the background for further study of software design and computer programming in a business environment. Emphasis on structured programming and program style. AND CICS Application Programming An introduction to CICS command-level programming using COBOL. Techniques to design and develop online application programs with CICS, a data communication system to maintain and access files and databases AND Applications in Information Systems Applications of computer programming and system development concepts, principles and practices to a comprehensive system development project. A team approach is used to design and develop a realistic system of moderate complexity. Also includes coverage of advanced features of the COBOL language. Most of the other schools I looked into used some combination of C, C++, Java, .net, and sometimes optional courses dedicated to the history of languages. Does anyone still use COBOL in business? I mean is this really what people go to school for? Original source, left column about 1/3 down.

          Total geek! :)

          M Offline
          M Offline
          Member 96
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          Cobol's pretty easy, if you know another language and are an experienced programmer you can pick it up pretty fast. I had to laugh back just before y2k when everyone was pronouncing doom and gloom because all the Cobol programmers had supposedly retired and no one could fix the code. Most of us here could have fixed that code easily given a week with a Cobol manual and creating our own text parsing tools to find the date bits in question. I learned it simultaneously with C and (a bunch of big iron specific stuff like JCL) at the now defunct Control Data Institute because that's where the jobs were back then. I think it's still used in the financial industry, they have a lot of stuff built on top of a lot of older stuff built on a lot of ancient stuff coral reef style. The only "ancient" language I know of that most modern programmers would find hard to pick up easily is any of the old platform specific assembly because it requires such a change of mind set. I would think it would be a good course to take after the basics are learned in another more learning friendly language first because it could open more doors if you need a job since few modern programmers would be interested in it and I think it's always a good idea to learn a new language every once in a while because they all give you better perspective and ideas just from the process of learning them even when you don't use them regularly.


          "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

          R H 2 Replies Last reply
          0
          • H Harvey Saayman

            i know for a fact that banking systems here in South Africa are cobol. its been like that for ages, one of the banks here give FREE training on cobol programming twice a year i think, because its cheaper to train people to use an old language and then employ them than to rewrite the systems in a newer one. something else that surprised me while working as a casual for an outsource IT company that support this banks computers is that the dual chip quad core servers in every branch runs on.... wait for it... OS2! and the tellers terminals are dummies that "download" their "OS" from the server upon booting. weird to think that our money is managed by programs as old as the earth :D

            Harvey Saayman - South Africa Junior Developer .Net, C#, SQL

            you.suck = (you.passion != Programming)

            M Offline
            M Offline
            Member 96
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            Ha! That's funny because I used to have an IT outsource company and once in a great while we'd be called in to fix pc's at a local Canadian bank's branches in a remote area when they couldn't get their own techs in and they all ran OS2 as well. It's not too surprising really, development is expensive and new development when you have perfectly good systems is not only pointless but very risky and banks are amongst the most risk averse and conservative organisations in the world. So: expensive, risky with a perfectly adequate system in place = not on your life. Also finance at it's core really hasn't changed much in hundreds of years so once it's written there's really little need or incentive to rewrite it.


            "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

            H M 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • E EHaskins

              I've been looking into Computer Science and Software Engineering schools lately, and I couldn't believe it when I saw that UW-Plattville teaches COBOL as part of their Comp Sci BS. Course description: Programming in COBOL To develop an understanding of and provide practice in the use of proper strategies and techniques for business program design and development. To develop ability to apply the COBOL language to implement problem solutions. To gain the background for further study of software design and computer programming in a business environment. Emphasis on structured programming and program style. AND CICS Application Programming An introduction to CICS command-level programming using COBOL. Techniques to design and develop online application programs with CICS, a data communication system to maintain and access files and databases AND Applications in Information Systems Applications of computer programming and system development concepts, principles and practices to a comprehensive system development project. A team approach is used to design and develop a realistic system of moderate complexity. Also includes coverage of advanced features of the COBOL language. Most of the other schools I looked into used some combination of C, C++, Java, .net, and sometimes optional courses dedicated to the history of languages. Does anyone still use COBOL in business? I mean is this really what people go to school for? Original source, left column about 1/3 down.

              Total geek! :)

              P Offline
              P Offline
              Pawel Krakowiak
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              EHaskins wrote:

              Does anyone still use COBOL in business?

              Yes, financial institutions - banks & insurance companies. My former employer is running RPG programs (I was part of the Windows developers team, though) in the 21st century.

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • M Member 96

                Cobol's pretty easy, if you know another language and are an experienced programmer you can pick it up pretty fast. I had to laugh back just before y2k when everyone was pronouncing doom and gloom because all the Cobol programmers had supposedly retired and no one could fix the code. Most of us here could have fixed that code easily given a week with a Cobol manual and creating our own text parsing tools to find the date bits in question. I learned it simultaneously with C and (a bunch of big iron specific stuff like JCL) at the now defunct Control Data Institute because that's where the jobs were back then. I think it's still used in the financial industry, they have a lot of stuff built on top of a lot of older stuff built on a lot of ancient stuff coral reef style. The only "ancient" language I know of that most modern programmers would find hard to pick up easily is any of the old platform specific assembly because it requires such a change of mind set. I would think it would be a good course to take after the basics are learned in another more learning friendly language first because it could open more doors if you need a job since few modern programmers would be interested in it and I think it's always a good idea to learn a new language every once in a while because they all give you better perspective and ideas just from the process of learning them even when you don't use them regularly.


                "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

                R Offline
                R Offline
                Rajesh R Subramanian
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                John C wrote:

                I had to laugh back just before y2k when everyone was pronouncing doom and gloom because all the Cobol programmers had supposedly retired and no one could fix the code.

                ROFL. I too remember that. There was way too much "The universe is going to halt" kinda hype. :-D

                Nobody can give you wiser advice than yourself. - Cicero .·´¯`·->Rajesh<-·´¯`·. Codeproject.com: Visual C++ MVP

                M 1 Reply Last reply
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                • E EHaskins

                  I've been looking into Computer Science and Software Engineering schools lately, and I couldn't believe it when I saw that UW-Plattville teaches COBOL as part of their Comp Sci BS. Course description: Programming in COBOL To develop an understanding of and provide practice in the use of proper strategies and techniques for business program design and development. To develop ability to apply the COBOL language to implement problem solutions. To gain the background for further study of software design and computer programming in a business environment. Emphasis on structured programming and program style. AND CICS Application Programming An introduction to CICS command-level programming using COBOL. Techniques to design and develop online application programs with CICS, a data communication system to maintain and access files and databases AND Applications in Information Systems Applications of computer programming and system development concepts, principles and practices to a comprehensive system development project. A team approach is used to design and develop a realistic system of moderate complexity. Also includes coverage of advanced features of the COBOL language. Most of the other schools I looked into used some combination of C, C++, Java, .net, and sometimes optional courses dedicated to the history of languages. Does anyone still use COBOL in business? I mean is this really what people go to school for? Original source, left column about 1/3 down.

                  Total geek! :)

                  R Offline
                  R Offline
                  Roger Alsing 0
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  I'm currently doing some projects at the Swedish road administration and most of the backend systems are old Cobol systems there. Pretty much every system here in Sweden that deals with driving licenses and traffic laws are in Cobol..

                  My Blog

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • E EHaskins

                    I've been looking into Computer Science and Software Engineering schools lately, and I couldn't believe it when I saw that UW-Plattville teaches COBOL as part of their Comp Sci BS. Course description: Programming in COBOL To develop an understanding of and provide practice in the use of proper strategies and techniques for business program design and development. To develop ability to apply the COBOL language to implement problem solutions. To gain the background for further study of software design and computer programming in a business environment. Emphasis on structured programming and program style. AND CICS Application Programming An introduction to CICS command-level programming using COBOL. Techniques to design and develop online application programs with CICS, a data communication system to maintain and access files and databases AND Applications in Information Systems Applications of computer programming and system development concepts, principles and practices to a comprehensive system development project. A team approach is used to design and develop a realistic system of moderate complexity. Also includes coverage of advanced features of the COBOL language. Most of the other schools I looked into used some combination of C, C++, Java, .net, and sometimes optional courses dedicated to the history of languages. Does anyone still use COBOL in business? I mean is this really what people go to school for? Original source, left column about 1/3 down.

                    Total geek! :)

                    S Offline
                    S Offline
                    Stuart Dootson
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    EHaskins wrote:

                    CICS

                    The more/only interesting thing about CICS is that it's one of the few applications developed using a formal specification language, in this case, Z[^].

                    EHaskins wrote:

                    Does anyone still use COBOL in business? I mean is this really what people go to school for?

                    I wouldn't - I'd go (I did go) to school to learn how to learn. That way, you can pick up new and different technologies that weren't around when you were at school.

                    S 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • R Rajesh R Subramanian

                      John C wrote:

                      I had to laugh back just before y2k when everyone was pronouncing doom and gloom because all the Cobol programmers had supposedly retired and no one could fix the code.

                      ROFL. I too remember that. There was way too much "The universe is going to halt" kinda hype. :-D

                      Nobody can give you wiser advice than yourself. - Cicero .·´¯`·->Rajesh<-·´¯`·. Codeproject.com: Visual C++ MVP

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      Member 96
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #10

                      Don't get me wrong, there would have been major problems all over the world at the time but what people seem to forget is that a lot of people worked very long hours for a long time prior to the rollover patching and upgrading hardware and software. We were at it full time for all of 2000 working at a variety of places including hospitals where if we hadn't done the patches some medical software would have screwed up medication plans, babies would have had the wrong age recorded etc. At financial places mortgages would have been screwed up, at lawyers offices their appointments would have been messed up, at an oil and gas storage facility all sorts of very bad things would have happened, those were just some of the things I was personally involved with. We had to patch so much at the hospital (and this was a relatively small hospital in a relatively small city) that they paid us to sit there on new years eve and confirm everything was working properly after midnight because there were so many serious systems involved. It would have all added up to a huge mess if it wasn't for the people that prevented it. Now it's a joke to most people but not to the ones that were there and prevented it from happening.


                      "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

                      R 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • M Member 96

                        Ha! That's funny because I used to have an IT outsource company and once in a great while we'd be called in to fix pc's at a local Canadian bank's branches in a remote area when they couldn't get their own techs in and they all ran OS2 as well. It's not too surprising really, development is expensive and new development when you have perfectly good systems is not only pointless but very risky and banks are amongst the most risk averse and conservative organisations in the world. So: expensive, risky with a perfectly adequate system in place = not on your life. Also finance at it's core really hasn't changed much in hundreds of years so once it's written there's really little need or incentive to rewrite it.


                        "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

                        H Offline
                        H Offline
                        Harvey Saayman
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #11

                        agreed... so schools teaching cobol is totally understandable

                        Harvey Saayman - South Africa Junior Developer .Net, C#, SQL

                        you.suck = (you.passion != Programming)

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • M Member 96

                          Cobol's pretty easy, if you know another language and are an experienced programmer you can pick it up pretty fast. I had to laugh back just before y2k when everyone was pronouncing doom and gloom because all the Cobol programmers had supposedly retired and no one could fix the code. Most of us here could have fixed that code easily given a week with a Cobol manual and creating our own text parsing tools to find the date bits in question. I learned it simultaneously with C and (a bunch of big iron specific stuff like JCL) at the now defunct Control Data Institute because that's where the jobs were back then. I think it's still used in the financial industry, they have a lot of stuff built on top of a lot of older stuff built on a lot of ancient stuff coral reef style. The only "ancient" language I know of that most modern programmers would find hard to pick up easily is any of the old platform specific assembly because it requires such a change of mind set. I would think it would be a good course to take after the basics are learned in another more learning friendly language first because it could open more doors if you need a job since few modern programmers would be interested in it and I think it's always a good idea to learn a new language every once in a while because they all give you better perspective and ideas just from the process of learning them even when you don't use them regularly.


                          "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

                          H Offline
                          H Offline
                          Harvey Saayman
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #12

                          John C wrote:

                          I think it's still used in the financial industry

                          its definitely used in the financial industry. my fathers girlfriend is a data modeler for a HUGE financial company here in SA and has told me that she still comes across programs she wrote in cobol YEARS ago that are still live today

                          Harvey Saayman - South Africa Junior Developer .Net, C#, SQL

                          you.suck = (you.passion != Programming)

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • M Member 96

                            Ha! That's funny because I used to have an IT outsource company and once in a great while we'd be called in to fix pc's at a local Canadian bank's branches in a remote area when they couldn't get their own techs in and they all ran OS2 as well. It's not too surprising really, development is expensive and new development when you have perfectly good systems is not only pointless but very risky and banks are amongst the most risk averse and conservative organisations in the world. So: expensive, risky with a perfectly adequate system in place = not on your life. Also finance at it's core really hasn't changed much in hundreds of years so once it's written there's really little need or incentive to rewrite it.


                            "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

                            M Offline
                            M Offline
                            Mycroft Holmes
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #13

                            John C wrote:

                            Also finance at it's core really hasn't changed much in hundreds of years

                            Maybe the core stuff is static - the trading systems become more esoteric almost daily. Try pricing some of the exotic deals around the trading floor. Then try designing a system to price the deals (generically).:mad: And yep I know some global FIs that are still running cobol as their core systems, my son in law works for one, and don't they pay him handsomely to drive their outdated systems. Pity there is no career path for him though.

                            Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

                            M 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • M Mycroft Holmes

                              John C wrote:

                              Also finance at it's core really hasn't changed much in hundreds of years

                              Maybe the core stuff is static - the trading systems become more esoteric almost daily. Try pricing some of the exotic deals around the trading floor. Then try designing a system to price the deals (generically).:mad: And yep I know some global FIs that are still running cobol as their core systems, my son in law works for one, and don't they pay him handsomely to drive their outdated systems. Pity there is no career path for him though.

                              Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              Member 96
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #14

                              Mycroft Holmes wrote:

                              Maybe the core stuff is static

                              That's what I meant, banks and the traditional stuff they do, not the stocks and bonds and currency trading stuff.

                              Mycroft Holmes wrote:

                              Pity there is no career path for him though.

                              In some ways it would be ideal though, particularly for an older person who doesn't want to constantly learn new stuff all the time, I can think of quite a few people here that would find that job ideal based on their opinions of new technology coming from Microsoft. ;)


                              "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

                              M 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • H Harvey Saayman

                                i know for a fact that banking systems here in South Africa are cobol. its been like that for ages, one of the banks here give FREE training on cobol programming twice a year i think, because its cheaper to train people to use an old language and then employ them than to rewrite the systems in a newer one. something else that surprised me while working as a casual for an outsource IT company that support this banks computers is that the dual chip quad core servers in every branch runs on.... wait for it... OS2! and the tellers terminals are dummies that "download" their "OS" from the server upon booting. weird to think that our money is managed by programs as old as the earth :D

                                Harvey Saayman - South Africa Junior Developer .Net, C#, SQL

                                you.suck = (you.passion != Programming)

                                S Offline
                                S Offline
                                Sam Hobbs
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #15

                                What do you really know about OS/2? You seem to be uninformed of the age of OS/2. Which is older; OS/2, Windows or Unix? Do you know what a "thin client" is?

                                H 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • M Member 96

                                  Mycroft Holmes wrote:

                                  Maybe the core stuff is static

                                  That's what I meant, banks and the traditional stuff they do, not the stocks and bonds and currency trading stuff.

                                  Mycroft Holmes wrote:

                                  Pity there is no career path for him though.

                                  In some ways it would be ideal though, particularly for an older person who doesn't want to constantly learn new stuff all the time, I can think of quite a few people here that would find that job ideal based on their opinions of new technology coming from Microsoft. ;)


                                  "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

                                  M Offline
                                  M Offline
                                  Mycroft Holmes
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #16

                                  John C wrote:

                                  particularly for an older person

                                  He's the son in law and I'm the old fart:laugh:.

                                  John C wrote:

                                  who doesn't want to constantly learn new stuff all the time

                                  As I sit here contemplating a potential Workflow project and shudder at the idea of getting into WPF. I don't mind learning the new stuff so much as I still get a thrill out of putting together an elegant solution. I just hate having to throw it away after I have spent months getting to know at technology deep enough to make it useful. If it was just once or twice I could live with it :sigh: but I have had to do it many times and it does get a little wearing.

                                  Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • S Stuart Dootson

                                    EHaskins wrote:

                                    CICS

                                    The more/only interesting thing about CICS is that it's one of the few applications developed using a formal specification language, in this case, Z[^].

                                    EHaskins wrote:

                                    Does anyone still use COBOL in business? I mean is this really what people go to school for?

                                    I wouldn't - I'd go (I did go) to school to learn how to learn. That way, you can pick up new and different technologies that weren't around when you were at school.

                                    S Offline
                                    S Offline
                                    Sam Hobbs
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #17

                                    Stuart Dootson wrote:

                                    The more/only interesting thing about CICS is that it's one of the few applications developed using a formal specification language, in this case, Z[^].

                                    Do you understand the difference between a programming language and a specification languge? There is a huge difference.

                                    S 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • M Member 96

                                      Don't get me wrong, there would have been major problems all over the world at the time but what people seem to forget is that a lot of people worked very long hours for a long time prior to the rollover patching and upgrading hardware and software. We were at it full time for all of 2000 working at a variety of places including hospitals where if we hadn't done the patches some medical software would have screwed up medication plans, babies would have had the wrong age recorded etc. At financial places mortgages would have been screwed up, at lawyers offices their appointments would have been messed up, at an oil and gas storage facility all sorts of very bad things would have happened, those were just some of the things I was personally involved with. We had to patch so much at the hospital (and this was a relatively small hospital in a relatively small city) that they paid us to sit there on new years eve and confirm everything was working properly after midnight because there were so many serious systems involved. It would have all added up to a huge mess if it wasn't for the people that prevented it. Now it's a joke to most people but not to the ones that were there and prevented it from happening.


                                      "It's so simple to be wise. Just think of something stupid to say and then don't say it." -Sam Levenson

                                      R Offline
                                      R Offline
                                      Rajesh R Subramanian
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #18

                                      You got me totally wrong there. I wasn't joking at it; I meant to tell that the problem itself was seen by the general public as something which cannot be solved and therefore the universe *will* halt at 2000. The media - every news paper, every news channel was talking about it repeatedly. Now, the fact that it has been solved is making the 2038 problem[^] gain no popularity at all.

                                      Nobody can give you wiser advice than yourself. - Cicero .·´¯`·->Rajesh<-·´¯`·. Codeproject.com: Visual C++ MVP

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • S Sam Hobbs

                                        What do you really know about OS/2? You seem to be uninformed of the age of OS/2. Which is older; OS/2, Windows or Unix? Do you know what a "thin client" is?

                                        H Offline
                                        H Offline
                                        Harvey Saayman
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #19

                                        Sam Hobbs wrote:

                                        What do you really know about OS/2?

                                        not much :)

                                        Sam Hobbs wrote:

                                        You seem to be uninformed of the age of OS/2.

                                        i am :)

                                        Sam Hobbs wrote:

                                        Which is older; OS/2, Windows or Unix?

                                        no idea :)

                                        Sam Hobbs wrote:

                                        Do you know what a "thin client" is?

                                        not a clue :)

                                        Harvey Saayman - South Africa Junior Developer .Net, C#, SQL

                                        you.suck = (you.passion != Programming)

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                                        • S Sam Hobbs

                                          Stuart Dootson wrote:

                                          The more/only interesting thing about CICS is that it's one of the few applications developed using a formal specification language, in this case, Z[^].

                                          Do you understand the difference between a programming language and a specification languge? There is a huge difference.

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                                          Stuart Dootson
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #20

                                          Ummmm - yeah. By "developed", I was referring to the whole software development lifecycle, from requirement specification through to implementation. I'm quite aware that something like Z allows you to define a software specification in a form that you can reason about.

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