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Virtualization - EC Asks Questions About IBM's Mainframe Business
EC Questioning Due to the Complaint the PSI Made Against IBM Last October, Charing it with Violation Article 82 of the EC Treaty

IBM may be starring down the barrel of an EC investigation of its precious mainframe business, significant to its bottom line.

According to both Bloomberg and Dow Jones, the commission has sent Big Blue a questionnaire asking for details about its mainframe business practices and questionnaires have a way of leading to formal investigations.

The EC is asking because of the complaint that Platform Solutions Inc (PSI) made against IBM last October, charging it with violating Article 82 of the EC Treaty, the very abuse-of-dominance provision used to nail Microsoft, a charge IBM ironically urged the EC to find against Microsoft.

PSI told the EC that IBM won’t give it the interface information and licenses it used to give plug-compatible makers when there were plug-compatible makers.

IBM is the only remaining mainframe maker and may be in something of a pickle here since back in the 80s it promised both European and US regulators that it would always make what PSI wants available to competitors to make the mother of all antitrust actions go away.

PSI is a would-be competitor with a so-called Itanium-based Open Mainframe that can run IBM’s z/OS – as well as Windows, Linux and Unix – only IBM is attempting to block it from marketing the thing.

PSI is highly reluctant to talk about its EC complaint, but marketing VP Christian O’Reilly confirms that the commission has been back asking PSI questions multiple times, which suggests that this isn’t the first questionnaire IBM has gotten.

IBM told the SEC and its stockholders it answered questions about the PSI complaint last year.

PSI, an Amdahl spin-off funded by Intel and Microsoft, among others, also has a major antitrust suit lodged against IBM with the US courts in answer to IBM’s suit charging PSI with patent infringement, a charge IBM made without examining PSI’s machine.

The allegations made to the EC echo PSI’s suit.

And speaking of the suit, PSI the other day asked the court of a summary judgment on IBM’s claims of trade secret misappropriation and tortious interference with contractual relations, practically the only documents in the case not under seal.

It claims IBM’s actions are a smokescreen, intended to eliminate competition.

PSI calculates, based on IBM’s Q4 numbers, that 40% of its software business and perhaps a third of it services revenues are ultimately driven by mainframes, making worth about $30 billion a year. Something like 60%-70% of corporate data is controlled by the mainframe.

About Maureen O'Gara
Maureen O'Gara is the Virtualization News Desk editor of SYS-CON Media. She is the publisher of famous "Billygrams" and the editor-in-chief of "Client/Server News" for more than a decade. One of the most respected technology reporters in the business, Maureen can be reached by email at maureen(at)sys-con.com or paperboy(at)g2news.com, and by phone at 516 759-7025.

YOUR FEEDBACK
Jan Naude wrote: Relating to Doug Smith's question: Doug, I think you misunderstand MVC. The components are: Model (data retrieved/manipulated by business rules) View (responsible for rendering/displaying relevant information to user) Controller - business logic that operates on/manipulates model to produce data to be displayed by view. The idea with MVC is not to mix business logic (i.e. Servlets/Struts actions) and presentation logic (jsp/html) in the same artifacts (components), because then you end up not being able to replace/change one without having to replace/change the other. JSF focuses more on easily developing the View part, while Struts concentrates more on Model and Controller and their integration.
Jose Arco wrote: Hi, Really interesting article. I have a related question. We have a web acces application based completly on Struts. Now we want to add a new funcionality based on JSF, the question is if we could have integration problems between both tools. Thanks in advanced
bill wrote: it would be nice to redo this comparison TODAY in 2007 and see what comes out. Struts2 has really added a ton to their side and JSF components have matured. I would like to see a modern comparison- as there does not seem to be one.
wildcat wrote: Hi, Yes JSF is the way to go. The thing which I like the most about JSF is the finer control given by the component based architechture which is the key for RAD tools..like .NET. Java is up there facing a string competition form .NET but hey JAVA will WIN.
Doug Smith wrote: Friends, this is going to sound like a really dumb question, but I am asking in all sincerity. While I understand the arguments to separate view (screen) from model (database & rules) & control (keyboard), I'm not sure I understand why I need Struts or JSF to do this. I can put code a View as a JSP, interact with the Model using Javabeans, and exercise Control using HTML or JSP directives. What exactly are the benefits using either Struts or JSF? The cost is obvious - another set of things to learn and configure. (Asked by a solo practitioner who doesn't work with graphic designers).
David Thirakul wrote: Very interesting article, thank you. We are currently working extensively with Struts for the presentation layer and are watching the progress of JSF with much interest because it seems to be the way to go in the long term. There is no doubt that JSF will take over as McClanahan stated himself when he was talking about migrating to JSF. (see http://www.theserverside.com/news/thread.tss?thread_id=29068). There's no new development on Struts as opposed to JSF which by the way is the answer to MS webforms. So to answer Tom's comment, yes there is overlaping and if you start a new project from scratch and want to compare struts and jsf, roland's article is very insightful. What I would like to point out also is that JSF seem to lack the ease of use and functionnality of webforms, that's why all the new development goes into JSF, there's a lot of catching up to do...
Roland Barcia wrote: Thanks for the feedback. Craig has a vested interest in both frameworks. There are features in Struts that compliment JSF like Tiles and the Validation framework. But just because they have some areas where they can work together does not mean I cannot compare them both. In this article, I focus on the Core of the frameworks and how they differ. I see very little benefit with the current Struts implementation to mix the Struts controller with the JSF components.
Tom Roche wrote: To speak of "JSF vs Struts" displays a lack of understanding of the different specializations of the two frameworks. JSF specializes in view, Struts in model and control. The two can be used together via the Struts-Faces Integration Library. As Craig McClanahan's inaugural blog post http://blogs.sun.com/roller/page/craigmcc/20040927#struts_or_jsf_struts_and points out: > For new development, here's the best strategy for determining what > to do: > * Evaluate the two technologies individually, to see if they satisfy > your requirements. > * If one or the other technology is sufficient, go ahead and use it > (it's easier to learn and use one technology rather than two where > possible); keeping in mind, however, the caveats about Struts HTML > tags mentioned above. > * If your requirements include unique features supported only by > Struts (such as Til...
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