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  • IBM's CICS Transaction Server 5.1 gears for cloud deployment

    Open beta of CICS Transaction Server 5.1 introduces a bevy of features to reduce planned downtime and let CICS applications function in the cloud.

  • CICS performance and design questions and answers, part 3

    Robert Crawford answers more of your questions on CICS application performance.

  • CICS mainframe storage protection

    Mainframe storage protection can help prevent storage overlays that can corrupt data or wreck a CICS region.

  • Making mainframe technology hip again

    The mainframe is a beautiful piece of technology, able to securely manage and meet the performance goals of disparate workloads for thousands of users in a relatively small, energy-efficient package. It maintains levels of compatibility and...

  • CICS and Service Component Architecture

    CICS’ support for Service Component Architecture enhances application portability and reuse.

  • Examining CICS TS 4.2 event processing improvements

    IBM’s CICS TS 4.2 offers many improvements to event processing that can help system programmers, such as a better-quality editor and the ability to emit events for state changes.

  • Exploring the changes in IBM's IMS 13 database management tool

    IBM announced the next version of Information Management System (IMS), its workhorse transaction processing and database management tool, in October 2012. This version, like the others before it, promises to maintain the stature of IMS as a...

  • New CICS TS 4.2 features to note

    IBM’s CICS TS 4.2 has expanded event processing capabilities, important performance improvements and additional storage support compared to the previous version.

  • Two forgotten but useful CICS transactions

    While CICS has evolved its system interface, the lesser-known CICS transactions ADYN and CSFE can still be useful for debugging and other tasks.

  • Update legacy mainframe assembler programs to make them LE compliant

    They’re out there, lurking deep inside your systems. They were originally written in the 1980s or ‘90s to perform some tricky programming that couldn't be done in COBOL. I’m talking about old, non-reentrant mainframe assembler...

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