Nobody has a pure mainframe or pure IBM site. Everybody has a little bit of everything.
For me to take someone's pic they have to have 'the look'. It may be a mix of different things - beauty, fame, flamboyance, a gorgeous outfit, but whatever it may be, they have to exude style.
The problem is, unless you are benchmarking your own work, it is hard to decide what value the benchmark has. Usually it is just another data point and it allows you to compare two different systems.
We are particularly concerned about the increased graphics requirement, so we will need to do a fair amount of testing to ensure that it doesn't bog down the systems too much with our current hardware.
Users provide the real quality of this meeting. They tell it like it is. They share ideas and share software, too. SHARE and its SHARE library invented the open source concept.
Professor Robinson's passionate commitment to socially conscious theater has inspired thousands of UCLA students. She was a great teacher, a significant scholar and a life force for her colleagues.
Our data is telling us that updated and improved standards of practice for storm water management would enhance water quality and do a better job of handling the volume of run-off.
Now IBM has customer councils, Web logs, a lot more sources of information, ... But one of the problems with getting information is that you need to validate it. How good is it? Who is this person, a crank or a CIO? Share offers a measure of quality of input.
An experienced technical person can make $70,000 to $80,000. Someone with management skills can make $100,000 or more. It's all moving toward becoming a seller's market.
It's as valid today as it was then.
It was the first of those movies that generated this whole food chain of merchandising and objects and sequels and re-releases and what-have-you over a period of time. It wasn't the one movie by itself but everything around.
In the '90s, with all those people saying the mainframe was dead ... it really killed people entering the field.
And our assembler 'boot camp' is very popular. You can't get in the door.