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The Ming Veritable Records [1] or Ming Shilu (traditional Chinese: 明實錄; simplified Chinese: 明实录; lit. 'Veritable Records of Ming'), contains the imperial annals of the emperors of the Ming dynasty (1368–1644). It is the single largest historical source of information on the dynasty.
A range of software vendors offer these systems at an enterprise level (i.e. targeted at managing all documents and records within an enterprise). [1] These vendors have historically provided electronic document management systems and have acquired smaller records management system companies. The seamlessness of the integration and the original ...
Record Management Services (RMS) are procedures in the VMS, RSTS/E, RT-11 and RSX-11M operating systems that programs may call to process files and records within files. [1] [2] Its file formats and procedures are similar to of those in some IBM access methods [a] for several of its mainframe computer operating systems [b] and by other vendors for file and record management.
Linux systems focusing on free software: Dragora GNU/Linux-Libre; gNewSense; Guix System Distribution; ... Portal: Free and open-source software/Operating systems.
The software was owned by HP Software Division and based on technology from Hewlett-Packard's 2008 acquisition of TOWER Software. [1] In August 2013, HP announced that HP TRIM would be integrated into a unified platform called HP Records Manager 8.0. In June 2016, HP Records Manager 8.0 was released as HP Content Manager 9. [2]
The earliest Veritable Records were those compiled under the direction of Zhou Xingsi (周興嗣, 469–521) for the reign of the Emperor Wu of Liang (r. 502–549), [2] but the practice of writing Veritable Records did not become standardized until the reign of the Emperor Taizong of Tang (r. 626–649), who was obsessed with his historical legacy.
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From 1397 to the fall of Ming in 1644, the Great Ming Code served as the principal governing law of China. Under the Qing dynasty it was replaced by the Great Qing Legal Code, which borrowed heavily from it. Portions of the Great Ming Code were adopted into the legal systems of Joseon dynasty Korea, Edo period Japan, and Lê dynasty Vietnam.