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GUIDE (Guidance for Users of Integrated Data-Processing Equipment) was a users' group for users of IBM computer systems. GUIDE was formed in 1956; it was incorporated in 1970 as a non-profit organization under the name of GUIDE International Corporation. [1] At its peak GUIDE had a membership of around 2,000 companies and institutions. [2]
IBM sued the Malta, N.Y.-based company in New York state court in 2021 for allegedly breaking a $1.5 billion contract to make high-performance chips for IBM. IBM, GlobalFoundries settle lawsuits ...
IBM's original OS/360 sort/merge program, 360S-SM-023, program name IERRCO00 (alias SORT), supported only IBM's first-generation direct-access storage devices (DASD) [d] and tapes (2400). Support for second-generation disk drives was provided by IBM program products such as 5734-SM1 and the later 5740-SM1 (DFSORT, alias ICEMAN, also SORT).
Here is a sample of IPF markup from IBM's Information Presentation Facility Programming Guide. .* This is a comment line :userdoc. :title.Endangered Mammals :h1 res=001. The Manatee :p. The manatee has a broad flat tail and two flipper like forelegs. There are no back legs.
Transaction Processing Facility (TPF) [2] is an IBM real-time operating system for mainframe computers descended from the IBM System/360 family, including zSeries and System z9. TPF delivers fast, high-volume, high-throughput transaction processing, handling large, continuous loads of essentially simple transactions across large, geographically ...
SHARE Inc. is a volunteer-run user group for IBM mainframe computers that was founded in 1955 by Los Angeles-area users of the IBM 704 computer system. It evolved into a forum for exchanging technical information about programming languages, operating systems, database systems, and user experiences for enterprise users of small, medium, and large-scale IBM computers such as IBM S/360, IBM S ...
Historically, two different, but similar, systems were called RETAIN. The first, dating to the mid-1960s was a system that provided technical information to people in the IBM Field Engineering Division in the form of short bulletins or tips, organized according to machine type number or, for software, according to software component ID number.
HASP II supported IBM terminals such as 2770, 2780, 3770, 3780, but additionally provided support for multi-leaving [7] communication with intelligent workstations such as the IBM 1130, IBM System/3 and the System/360 Model 20. Multi-leaving is "fully synchronous, pseudo-simultaneous, bi-directional transmission of a variable number of data ...