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IBM Planning Analytics powered by TM1 (formerly IBM Cognos TM1, formerly Applix TM1, formerly Sinper TM/1 [1]) is a business performance management software suite designed to implement collaborative planning, budgeting and forecasting solutions, interactive "what-if" analyses, as well as analytical and reporting applications.
Pennsylvania is pulling the plug on an IBM computer project that it says is 42 months behind schedule and more than $60 million over budget, the state's Department of Labor and Industry announced ...
Source Program Maintenance Online II (with abbreviations such as SPM, SPM/OL, or SPMOL-II, and pronounced "S-P-M" or, informally, "Spimoli"), is an IBM software product of the late 1970s and early 1980s that provided an online environment for computer programmers working on IBM mainframe systems.
In fact, the structural engineers for the IBM Building, John Skilling and Leslie E. Robertson, were also responsible for the World Trade Center. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette called the IBM Building "one of the first real changes from conventional design in half a century of multi-story building." [15] Detail of the building exterior
IBM CICS (Customer Information Control System) is a family of mixed-language application servers that provide online transaction management and connectivity for applications on IBM mainframe systems under z/OS and z/VSE. CICS family products are designed as middleware and support rapid, high-volume online transaction processing.
Thomas John Watson Sr. (February 17, 1874 – June 19, 1956) was an American businessman who was the chairman and CEO of IBM. [1] [2] He oversaw the company's growth into an international force from 1914 to 1956.
IBM originated with several technological innovations developed and commercialized in the late 19th century. Julius E. Pitrap patented the computing scale in 1885; [17] Alexander Dey invented the dial recorder (1888); [18] Herman Hollerith patented the Electric Tabulating Machine (1889); [19] and Willard Bundy invented a time clock to record workers' arrival and departure times on a paper tape ...
By 1967/8 IBM generalized its airline reservations work into the PARS system, which ran on the larger members of the IBM System/360 family and which could support the largest airlines' needs at that time (e.g. United Airlines ran about 3000 reservations terminals online in the 1972 timeframe). In the early 1970s IBM modified its PARS ...