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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.
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 main laboratory building of the IBM Research Center in Yorktown Heights, New York. The Thomas J. Watson Research Center is the headquarters for IBM Research. Its main laboratory is in Yorktown Heights, New York, 38 miles (61 km) north of New York City. It also operates facilities in Cambridge, Massachusetts and Albany, New York.
The roots of today's IBM Research began with the 1945 opening of the Watson Scientific Computing Laboratory at Columbia University. [4] This was the first IBM laboratory devoted to pure science and later expanded into additional IBM Research locations in Westchester County, New York, starting in the 1950s, [5] [6] including the Thomas J. Watson Research Center in 1961.
"Occasionally" [2] IBM software has a bug. Once it has been ascertained that the situation has not been caused by problems in third-party hardware or software or the user's configuration errors, IBM support staff, if they suspect that a defect in a current release of an IBM program is the cause, will file a formal report confirming the existence of an issue.
Ooms, Marius (2009). "Trends in Applied Econometrics Software Development 1985–2008: An Analysis of Journal of Applied Econometrics Research Articles, Software Reviews, Data and Code". Palgrave Handbook of Econometrics. Vol. 2: Applied Econometrics. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 1321– 1348. ISBN 978-1-4039-1800-0. Renfro, Charles G. (2004).
IBM Unica NetInsight was a web analytics application that utilized an Extract, transform, load methodology [1] to populate a database that could then be queried using a browser-based interface. NetInsight is from the same family of tools as Unica NetTracker .
Originally developed by IBM in 1959, the name Report Program Generator was descriptive of the purpose of the language: generation of reports from data files. [12] FOLDOC accredits Wilf Hey with work at IBM that resulted in the development of RPG. [13] FARGO (Fourteen-o-one Automatic Report Generation Operation) was the predecessor to RPG on the ...