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The IBM Toronto Software Lab is the largest software development laboratory in Canada and IBM's third largest software lab. Established in 1967 with 55 employees, [ 1 ] the Toronto Lab, now located in Markham has grown to employ 2,500 people.
Each of these packages includes its own licensing information and while IBM has made the code available to AIX users, the code is provided as is and has not been thoroughly tested. [4] The Toolbox is meant to provide a core set of some of the most common development tools and libraries along with the more popular GNU packages. [5]
Former IBM Canada Head Office Building at 3600 Steeles East. IBM Canada's head offices are currently located in Markham, Ontario and have been there since the early 1980s. The current building IBM occupies is located at 8200 Warden Avenue and shared with existing tenant IBM Toronto Software Lab in 2001.
The application program interfaces of IBM's mainframe operating systems is defined as a set of assembly language "macro" instructions, that typically invoke Supervisor Call (SVC) [e.g., on z/OS] or Diagnose (DIAG) [on, e.g., z/VM] instructions to invoke operating system routines. It is possible to use operating system services from programs ...
[2] [3] LSF was based on the Utopia research project at the University of Toronto. [4] In 2007, Platform released Platform Lava, which is a simplified version of LSF based on an old version of LSF release, licensed under GNU General Public License v2. [5] The project was discontinued in 2011, succeeded by OpenLava.
Tivoli Service Automation Manager is the Cloud management package from IBM in the Tivoli Software brand. Unofficial abbreviations are TSAM and TivSAM. As the product sheet [1] sells it: "IBM Tivoli Service Automation Manager enables users to request, deploy, monitor and manage cloud computing services. It also provides traceable approvals and ...
Sterling software changed the well known name "Information Engineering Facility" to "COOL:Gen". COOL was an acronym for "Common Object Oriented Language" - despite the fact that there was little object orientation in the product. In 2000, Sterling Software was acquired by Computer Associates (now CA). CA has rebranded the product three times to ...
Qiskit (Quantum Information Software Kit) is an open-source software development kit (SDK) for working with quantum Computers at the level of circuits, pulses, and algorithms. It provides tools for creating and manipulating quantum programs and running them on prototype quantum devices on IBM Quantum Platform or on simulators on a local computer.