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Looking for more in-depth info on the following topics? |
| Batch Applications – The Hidden Asset |
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There is tremendous value invested in batch applications that may seem locked in mainframe architecture. Taking advantage of new technologies on the mainframe, such as Web services, requires considerable effort and investment—more than most companies can afford. If this value can be placed in a more flexible, agile environment, such as the Windows operating system and the Microsoft .NET Framework, organizations have the opportunity to unlock the value to enhance business operations and provide new or better services to customers.
Read the full white paper (PDF)* June 2006, last reviewed March 2008 |
| Why the NeoSort World Record is Good News for Mainframe Users |
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There is tremendous value invested in batch applications that may seem locked in mainframe architecture. Taking advantage of new technologies on the mainframe, such as Web services, requires considerable effort and investment—more than most companies can afford. If this value can be placed in a more flexible, agile environment, such as the Windows operating system and the Microsoft .NET Framework, organizations have the opportunity to unlock the value to enhance business operations and provide new or better services to customers.
Read the full white paper (Word doc) July 2006, last reviewed March 2008 |
| Reuse versus Rewrite: An Emperical Study |
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Based on the data collected, analyzed and presented, the following conclusions appear valid at this time:
- The time to convert the application chosen for testing using COBOL and the CICS migration solution was on average less than 3% of the time needed to rewrite the application in JAVA.
- The skill level of the programmer had little overall effect on conversion time when compared to time needed to rewrite code in JAVA. At all skill levels tested (levels 1 through 3) conversion times were less than 5% of JAVA rewrite times.
- Training times to use COBOL and the CICS migration solution for conversion work on straightforward applications is minimal.
- With appropriate training, less skilled employees or paraprofessionals, rather than skilled technicians can do most of the work required to reuse the system using the CICS migration solution in a fraction of the time needed to rewrite.
Read the full white paper (PDF)* May 2005, last reviewed March 2008 |
| Creating COBOL from the .NET Framework Class Library Help Topics |
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NetCOBOL for .NET supports most of the .NET Framework constructs so you can take advantage of the .NET Framework class libraries. However, the documentation on the class libraries is not written with COBOL in mind. This paper provides guidelines for interpreting the .NET Framework documentation and map the .NET Framework constructs to their NetCOBOL for .NET forms.
Read the full white paper (PDF)* October 2003, last reviewed March 2008 |
| Moving your COBOL Assets to Microsoft .NET |
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This white paper outlines the options available on the market and discusses a new solution — NetCOBOL for .NET — and its approach to moving COBOL assets over to Microsoft’s .NET platform.
Read the full white paper (PDF)* August 2002, last reviewed March 2008 |
| COBOL for Microsoft .NET Framework |
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Discusses why COBOL and .NET are strong partners and explains how NetCOBOL has been integrated into the .NET Framework.
Read the full white paper December 2001, last reviewed March 2008 |
| Best of GUI, Best of Business, Accessing COBOL Programs from Visual Basic |
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Are you one of the many who have made Visual Basic® your tool and language of choice for creating graphical interfaces for your applications, yet have a considerable amount of business logic written, and still being written, in COBOL —the language designed to support business programming? COBOL applications can consist of thousands or millions of lines of code that have been honed over the years to reflect current business rules. Rewriting this code is not an option. To capitalize on the value in the existing code and the benefits of Visual Basic you need a way of combining the two languages as easily as possible.
This white paper describes three ways you can achieve language integration using Fujitsu COBOL.
Read the full white paper (PDF)
(From the May 1999 issue of Visual Basic Programmer's Journal) |
*These white papers are in PDF format. You must have Adobe Acrobat Reader™ to view these files. You can obtain the latest PDF reader directly from Adobe. |