T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1382.1 | ALL-IN-1 is a service | ANGLIN::BRISCOE | | Thu Feb 28 1991 13:58 | 17 |
| Just type $ to get to DCL.
Anyway - ALL-IN-1 is a "service" supplied to support your business
"functions". If You need VMS level services to do your job - what's
the problem?
For instance, I store DOCUMENT files on my mail account in a VMS
subdirectory - I don't need or use ALL-IN-1 even though my mail account
logs me into it when I log in.
I also spend quite a bit of time in VTX and NOTES - even though I can
access them from ALL-IN-1, why should I take up the process service
overhead?
Have fun!
tjb
|
1382.2 | Definitely raising, not solving, issues | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Pete[r][s] | Thu Feb 28 1991 14:10 | 21 |
| If your system is being provided by the information services group, meaning
that your cost center is charged quarterly for your ALL-IN-1 account, I
would limit use of the system within the confines intended.
If your account is set CAPTIVE, e.g., you can't SPAWN from VML (VAXmail),
and the "DCL" command is not implemented on your AI1 menu, then you may
indeed take those as hints regarding the intended use of your system.
On the other hand, VTX, NOTES, ELF, and other facilities should all be
accessible from your AI1 menu. If you need DCL to access these, then you
are not "perverting" the intention of the system, as part of the charter
of the system you are using is to provide access to information within
Digital.
This is neither a new issue nor question. And, I am sure, someone in
DIS (or tis new acronym) will now go off hunting to make sure that DIS
managed systems disable some of the means of DCL access you documented.
A stone better left unturned.
/Peters
|
1382.3 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | God is their co-pilot | Thu Feb 28 1991 20:58 | 18 |
| From the user's point of view:
If there's some discrepency between what you need to do in the
accomplishment of your job functions and what access controls have been
placed on your account, then please contact your system manager.
If that doesn't get a satisfactory resolution, contact your manager.
From a system manager's point of view:
VMS has adequate access controls. Understand them and implement them
correctly. Users make a game of avoiding them. On the other hand, if
managers have made dumb decisions restricting users from doing useful
work, you ought to speak up for the users.
For those who may not know, it's routine to assign ALL-IN-1 (a
trademark of Digital Equipment Corporation) accounts that inadequately
restrict access to DCL as indicated in the previous replies.
|
1382.4 | | RBW::WICKERT | MAA USIS Consultant | Thu Feb 28 1991 23:26 | 38 |
|
First, to put what I'm about to say in the correct context. I'm an IM&T
(the "new" name of DIS; you can't be any good if you haven't changed
your name in the last 12 months, BTW) Consultant who believes DCL
access should be avaiable upon request.
Most I.S. system managers are aware of the methods you mentioned. Some
can be disabled but most can't, at least not without a significant
amount of work. The reasons for captive accounts have evolved over the
last 3-4 years and now mainly aren't security related but instead
are support issues.
We allow DCL access to people who can show a need, not just a desire.
We've had people in the past demand DCL as more of a status symbol and,
having the poltical clout to overrule our best judgement, have been
granted it. Some of those same people then end up deleting their
ALL-IN-1 subdirectory tree and cause themselves, and us, a lot of grief
and work. These are the people we're concerned about.
We don't install some products for just these reasons. You usually
won't find compilers on I.S. systems since we don't want them used for
development.
The only problem with using the ALL-IN-1 systems for other products is
that they often have a different usage profile. I mean that mail usage
is normally a quick on-work-off using a large amount of resources (such
as CPU) while using something like Notes could mean a long session with
light resource usage. Trying to satisfy both profiles with VERY limited
hardware budget is a real pain. You can use a low login limit to ensure
decent performance for the ALL-IN-1 users but then a Notes user would
block an ALL-IN-1 user, which is usually the "main" charter of the
system.
Anyway, I wouldn't be too concerned about it. I would suggest you
contact your support group and request DCL access. You may get it.
-Ray
|
1382.5 | power more importent then productivity | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Thu Feb 28 1991 23:35 | 10 |
| I wonder how long it will before someone (probably a system
manager) sends mail or (more likely) calls up a moderator and
demands that .0 be deleted as a "security violation"{
RE: .0 If you need DCL access and your system manager does not
give it to you without you playing silly games then your manager
has a clear action item{to get that fixed. A managers job is to
get her people the things they need to do their job.
Alfred
|
1382.6 | How come our field people don't know so much these days? | COUNT0::WELSH | What are the FACTS??? | Fri Mar 01 1991 07:27 | 207 |
| re .0:
Firstly, the fact that you are asking this question at all shows
clearly that you are either fairly new to Digital, or one of the
minority of very honest, innocent, straightfoward people who tend
to fit poorly into organizational life.
I believe that most of us would "do what's right", taking into
consideration such questions as
"Is what I need to do going to earn revenue for the company, help
a customer, or otherwise accomplish something useful?"
"In practice, am I likely to be able to do what I need to by going
through channels in less than, say, 2 or 3 months?"
"Will anyone give me credit for going through channels?"
"Who does this equipment belong to anyway?"
"Are the people who manage this equipment in any way measured on
the revenue earned, customers satisfied, or any other real metric
of business success? (or are they just there to make sure the
inmates don't escape?)"
Denunciations of the compulsory ALL-IN-1 which is rammed down
peoples' throats has become so widespread that it is often
considered an unacceptable rathole. There are notes in this and
other conferences in which people who just want to get their work
done have alternated literally hundreds of replies with other
people who feel that ALL-IN-1 is actually a contribution to
civilization. Everyone feels sick of the whole issue.
However, your base note addresses it, so for the record, here goes.
<flame on>:
* ALL-IN-1 was a good office system for selling large computer
configurations to naive customers who had large amounts of
money, and neither knew nor wanted to know anything about
computers. (IMHO, this description is a poor fit for Digital,
but I could be wrong). In case anyone still doesn't know, the
recommended prerequisites for ALL-IN-1 are about 5 times the
CPU power for the same number of VMS users - memory and disk
needs are also high. This is actually good for a vendor,
like Digital, which still makes most of its money from hardware sales.
* ALL-IN-1 made a creditable attempt at giving users some of the
benefits of the workstation environment before there were
workstations - such as menu interfaces and a common look and
feel.
* In the early days, ALL-IN-1 sales lagged because there were
too few experts in the field. Some bright spark decided the
right way to handle this was to force everybody in the company
to use ALL-IN-1 for everything all the time (all the time they
could get logged in and get a response in less than half an hour,
that is). As a result:
- The company spent something like $500 million equipping
everybody with vast VAXclusters that would allow most
of the users to get an acceptable response time (remember,
about a quarter of that would have sufficed had they
just used vanilla VMS).
- The company noticed that this was a lot of money, so it
also kindly provided a large IS organization to "manage"
and "measure" it all, and make sure that the stupid,
malicious, computer-illiterate users didn't mess things
up. IS was provided with as many people as it needed,
together with offices, equipment, and an imposing
management edifice.
- In this company which introduced the Programmable Date
Processor to liberate customers from the tyranny of the
whitecoated MIS staff who owned the mainframe in the
refrigerated glasshouse, we started to pay a large
number of IS staff to own mainframes in refrigerated
glasshouses, and measured them on their success in
preventing individual users doing what they needed and
wanted to do. Instead, IS asked the users' managers what
the users needed to do. The managers, who didn't use
computers anyway, left it very much up to them.
- The IS staff who were being paid to maintain these large
ALL-IN-1 systems quickly discovered that they needed to
impose proper SECURITY. Otherwise the users could start
doing their own thing. So their first step was to deny
all the users privileges, and then to restrict them to
ALL-IN-1. (An IS system manager once told me that I wasn't
allowed DCL access because VMS "was insecure"). Ask yourself:
whom does this regime benefit most: the company, the
users (aka salesmen, specialists, marketeers, managers,
etc) - or the system managers?
- At first (for the first few years of ALL-IN-1), the people
who had decided everyone should use ALL-IN-1 didn't notice
that this required 5 times as much hardware. So they didn't
budget any extra hardware, with the simple result that only
20% of the users could get logged in at any one time. Response
was so poor that most people gave up trying to use anything
except mail. This had some hilarious consequences: when I
finally managed to acquired a MicroVAX II for my group of
6 people back in 1985, my manager solemnly told me that
nobody was to be allowed to use it for mail, otherwise
it would grind to a halt. Since we used VMS, however, we
happily used mail (and Notes, and VTX, and Ada, and Rdb,
and RALLY, and...) without ever experiencing slow response.
- Management was very happy that our new IS experts were
taking care of all the system management (an unpleasant
chore), thus turning loose a lot of software specialist
hours to do useful work - like presales. After a few
years, however, they began to notice that not as many
people seemed to be available with good system management
skills (or programming, or performance analysis, or...)
This inexplicable trend weas very embarrassing, since
there was strong customer demand for precisely those
skills.
- However, some managers then came up with a brilliant new
idea: let's *merge* IS with Software Services, and call the
resulting organisation EIS. Then all these skilled system
managers, programmers, performance analysts, etc. from
IS, can go out and consult with customers. (The way software
specialists used to do as a matter of course, before they
were prevented from managing their own systems). What a
stroke of genius! First, split something perfectly effective
in two artifical pieces. Then, a few years later, stick
them back together. Two lots of managers become heroes,
nobody notices that the net result is more or less to
restore the status quo (because managers are careful
never to remember the past)... and what's more, somewhere
along the line we've probably made room for a few hundred
extra managers, which has got to be good news.
- It became awfully difficult to find enough people with
system management skills to run the proliferating IS
clusters around the world. No problem, management hired
lots of contractors in. Thus, in 1985 I moved from a job
in the UK CSC where I was providing national-level support
on VMS internals, to a job as a SWAS specialist - and
suddenly found that my horizons had narrowed from SETPRV,
XDELTA and hardware access to a captive ALL-IN-1 account,
and being barred from the computer room. To get anything
additional, I had to ask a downy-cheeked youth who had
been hired as an operator but became system manager of
the ALL-IN-1 systems for an entire Region - by default.
Over the years, this guy went on courses, learned by
trial and error, until he became very expert and
knowledgeable. At which point, of course, he left Digital
and is now making a very lucrative living as a freelance
consultant and journalist. Digital, for its part, has the
satisfaction of knowing that it has ploughed several years
of expensive formal and informal training into this person,
and sent him forth into the world to become rich. Who says
altruism is dead? And... er... we are still short of
system managers.
* Some brave or lucky people, who managed to get permission from
their managers, set up their own standalone systems - often
workstations or LAVcs - and ran them themselves. This took up
some time (quite a lot of time, actually) but did enable them
to become familiar with all the things that don't mix with
ALL-IN-1. These people (including most of Corporate Engineering)
still have trouble interfacing with the ALL-IN-1 mail system
used by IS and its captives (including the whole sales force and
most of marketing).
* It sounds logical to "use what we sell" - until you start to
think about all the other things we sell that ALL-IN-1 doesn't
allow us to use. For instance, there must be several dozen
people (if not several hundred) in the UK trained on ALL-IN-1.
There are about 2 trained on Ada (which takes less time to
learn, but which cannot be used from a captive ALL-IN-1 account).
Yet last quarter in the UK, VAX Ada brought in more revenue to
Digital than did ALL-IN-1. That's just my favourite gripe.
ALL-IN-1 also precludes use of all workstation software whatever,
all UNIX software whatever, all programming languages and CASE
tools, all DECtp products except perhaps RALLY and TEAMDATA,
all real time products, imaging, desktop publishing, CDA, and
almost all of NAS. Oh, and anything to do with VMS, of course.
* What are we going to do now? When ALL-IN-1 supports workstations,
will sales people be encouraged to use those? They still won't
learn about all the standard workstation facilities which ALL-IN-1
bars them from. What if they want to use UNIX? Will IS give them
Uniplex systems?
* Today, Digital confronts a major crisis. We need to realize
more revenue and in particular, higher margins - which means
essentially selling software and consultancy, but mainly
software. This is happening at a time when our traditional hardware
base is being eroded by Open Systems. We are effectively headcount
frozen, with a goal of reducing our headcount. Yet we need to
provide customers with rapid, flexible access to expertise which
not only understands VMS, UNIX, MS-DOS, OSF/1, and NAS, plus
all of the hundreds of layered products, but is able to integrate
them deftly and selectively to address specific customer
requirements. In other words, we need people who are highly
motivated, who know a great deal about software and applications,
and who are able to go on learning at a great pace. And we need
a lot of these people. Are we going to develop them by confining
our sales and sales support force in ALL-IN-1 captive accounts?
/Tom
|
1382.7 | More info about .0 | PLAYER::CROCUS::VANDYCK | Symbolic stack dump fellow | Fri Mar 01 1991 10:42 | 36 |
| Whow! At least, now I know that there are other people than me who
have 'strong feelings' (to stay polite) against All-in-1...
It's true I don't like it either. I never used seriously anything else
than the EM menus. But I like this UDP feature which I have programmed to
create for me a DECwindows terminal on my station just by hitting F20...
I run 'hole-in-1' in client server mode too. Through a decwindows terminal,
triggered by DCL transparent task-to-task communication!
The reason why I use DCL from All-in-1 is... the DECNet address of my
station! Here in Europe, we are short of DECNet addresses, so we have found
a hack, called 'hidden area' which allows to have more than one system with the
same DECnet address on the same network. The only problem is that those systems
cannot connect to any node outside their own LAN (ethernet segment, if you
prefer); all the DECnet packets are thrown away the first time they reach a
router. All stations, PCs, small systems have received such addresses in order
to free up good addresses for the big glassroom machines; my one just happens to
be one of those poor systems which cannot see the rest of the world...
This means that I need a machine which a unique node address to perform
all network access: mail, notes, vtx, ftsv, remote rdb ... I also can use
"poor man's routing" with some tools (like notes, look at the header of this
reply) but I find it slow and inneficient.
I'm not that new to DIGITAL (4 years) but I recently came across note
593 of this conference, which points out an issue which I find related to mine:
the difference between what is considered ethical and what the systems allow you
to do. It's also similar it the fact that the conclusions which a manager
could arrive to about this - blessing or punishment - will strongly depend on
his mood, position, feelings, personal view... That's why I decided to ask.
Given the fact that I'm not using any 'cracking' technique, but just
trying to be smarter than the sysmgt team (you're right to point out that
finding ways to trespassing those not-totally-closed doors is an amazing
challenge - at least for me...), I would consider very negatively to be
sanctionned for doing it...
|
1382.8 | Swan song | BOSEPM::BARTH | Special K | Fri Mar 01 1991 10:47 | 94 |
| RE: 1382.6
As a member of ALL-IN-1 product management and former field SWS body, I feel
the need to provide another version of the facts presented in .6. Since I
am based in the US, there may be some internal implementation differences
due to geography but I think the gist of what I have to say crosses most
boundaries.
ALL-IN-1 is a good office system. It is certainly true that we sell lots
of it (more revenue than any software except VMS & DECnet) and a lot of times
it is sold to people who do not know or want to know anything about computers.
.6 is correct in suggesting that it is unusual for DEC to sell anything like
that, but its success should perhaps indicate maybe we try to do more of it.
ALL-IN-1's sales never really lagged in the early days. We have been
profitable since the first quarter we were productized. When field people
got more up to speed, we sold even more of it. In a typical year, ALL-IN-1
accounts for $1,300,000,000 of hardware, software, & services CERTS.
The point of using A1 in field offices for mail was because DECmail was
widely used and it was going away. The original motivation for the captive
A1 accounts was simply that the machines used for DECmail were too small
to allow people to do ALL-IN-1 and other things as well.
I'm sure Tom is right that we spent $500 million on "vast VAXclusters" but
I don't think it was motivated by the change to A1. When I joined the company
in 1984, we didn't have much in the way of computing in field offices. The
investment in field computing was something whose time had come. I think it
is unfair and inappropriate to say that the need was predicated on the ALL-IN-1
rollout. Those computers were needed because there WEREN'T ANY.
I wouldn't dream of commenting on where the IS organization came into this.
Saying that ALL-IN-1 needs 5 times as much hardware as VMS is like saying
that a banana isn't very good when used as a hammer. If the tool that you
need is VMS, then you should have the access to VMS that you need. There are
plenty of people in this company (I mean LOTS) for whom ALL-IN-1 is a useful
tool upon which they rely to get their work done. For them, the amount of
VMS resources consumed is irrelevant. They just want to get their job done.
Giving them the "more efficient" VMS would be pointless, as they wouldn't
get anything done in the user unfriendly "$" environment. Just ask any of
A1's 4 million users around the world. If you want to see how effective
ALL-IN-1 can be, talk to one of your sales people. They love their customer
provided A1 accounts whether or not they like their account at their local
office. It's been our experience that none of the local office ALL-IN-1's
provide site-specific capabilities (like order tracking) tailored to the
needs of the people at that office. Of course, our customers do applications
like that all the time.
> ...These people (including most of Corporate Engineering)
> still have trouble interfacing with the ALL-IN-1 mail system
> used by IS and its captives (including the whole sales force and
> most of marketing).
I'm afraid this is simply not the case. I am on the ADD network and
communicate to and from the production mail network via pretty much all
mail agents that we sell.
> * It sounds logical to "use what we sell" - until you start to
> think about all the other things we sell that ALL-IN-1 doesn't
> allow us to use. For instance, there must be several dozen
> people (if not several hundred) in the UK trained on ALL-IN-1.
> There are about 2 trained on Ada (which takes less time to
> learn, but which cannot be used from a captive ALL-IN-1 account).
> Yet last quarter in the UK, VAX Ada brought in more revenue to
> Digital than did ALL-IN-1. That's just my favourite gripe.
> ALL-IN-1 also precludes use of all workstation software whatever,
> all UNIX software whatever, all programming languages and CASE
> tools, all DECtp products except perhaps RALLY and TEAMDATA,
> all real time products, imaging, desktop publishing, CDA, and
> almost all of NAS. Oh, and anything to do with VMS, of course.
Totally incorrect. It may be that the implementation of ALL-IN-1 provided by
DIS at your site do not provide access to ADA, CDA, publising, imaging, etc.
That does not mean that ALL-IN-1 cannot interface to them, provide access to
applications, allow total user manipulation of them, and in general allow full
use of those tools by the person using ALL-IN-1.
FWIW, I agree with your later contentions that we must provide access to
the tools and applications which people will be selling. This only makes
sense and there are lots of ways that we can let people get to that software.
However, the existence or non-existence of ALL-IN-1 is largely irrelevant to
the issue. It may be an excuse used by system managers. It may be an excuse
used by finance or IS management. But blaming ALL-IN-1 is a total cop-out.
What we need to see is a more responsive attitude among the people providing the
hardware/software facilities (IS, DIS, or whatever they are) to the people
who need those systems. When I was in the field, I had some very frustrating
and some very good experiences when dealing with the DIS folks. (My impression
was that "DIS management" was an oxymoron. I hope that was unique to our
facility, but I have a feeling it wasn't so.)
Karl B. on his last day in A1 product management
|
1382.9 | | DACT6::COLEMAN | No, this isn't Perry--it's Cheryl | Fri Mar 01 1991 11:00 | 8 |
| Re: 1382.8
Karl,
On behalf of Perry (Coleman) and myself, we couldn't have said
it better ourselves!
Cheryl Coleman
|
1382.10 | It's not the tool, it's us | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Pete[r][s] | Fri Mar 01 1991 13:21 | 40 |
|
What I use ALL-IN-1 mail for:
- "official communications", i.e., anything to management or copying
management in other organizations
What I use VAXmail for:
- "technical communications", i.e., with individual contributors
Memos which cover both categories usually wind up ALL-IN-1.
ALL-IN-1 is particularly good at:
- letting you know mail was delivered (VAXmail is immediate,
Nmail lets you know, too)
- letting you know mail was read
- letting you respond to either the person who sent you the mail
or to everyone who received that person's mail that they sent
The last one, in particular, is very important.
And finally, you can't select mail priority for messages going through
a message router gateway from VAXmail. The last time I sent out a mail
message that went
Workstation -> Gateway -> (cc: copy) Workstation
it took 5 days. The event my mail announced was scheduled 4 days from
the day I send my mail.
If I have one problem, it's that document quotas force me to print
all my ALL-IN-1 mail. It's a necessary evil, otherwise 50% of the U.S.
would be leased by Digital to house disk farms!
ALL-IN-1 does the job fine. It's the VOLUME of memos we generate that's
the problem.
/Petes
|
1382.11 | | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Fri Mar 01 1991 14:28 | 12 |
| It's interesting. It seems that when you mention ALL-IN-1 most people
immediately think of mail. I know that's all I use it for and I only use
it because it takes too long to forward my mail to my workstation.
I also suspect that a lot of bad feelings about ALL-IN-1 are due to the fact
that the corporation won't supply enough computer resources to make it run
efficiently. The only thing worse than ALL-IN-1 on a DIS machine is DECwindows
on a 6MB VS2000.
Also, the local customizations and applications built on ALL-IN-1 are horrible.
Bob
|
1382.12 | Walk a mile in the other man's shoes... | RBW::WICKERT | MAA USIS Consultant | Fri Mar 01 1991 17:20 | 38 |
|
Tom,
The worse run production systems I've ever seen in my life were those
run by SWS. I spent 10 years in SWS and have to be the first to admit
that we never took system management seriously. Specialists were
assigned to manage the local systems right out of training (if they got
it at all) and then only spent 6 months on it before going out on a
residency which started the entire cycle right over. This is assuming a
single person was assigned the job in the first place - quite often it
was split between several specialists on a part time basis. Backups and
security are a joke...
Everyone jumps on DIS about machine resources. Did you ever try to get
a machine in SWS before workstations were made available in the last
few years? We try to stay ahead of the curve in CPU/disk/memory
demands and until this year were pretty sucessful. Things like IEG
freezes don't help...
The best thing that could happen to both EIS and IS is to merge them.
I've been saying since I joined DIS 3.5 years ago that we should have a
small core of I.S. professionals (whatever that really means) and then
most system managers should be SWS/EIS/whatever employees on 1 - 2 year
assignments. At the end of that time they could go out to our customers
who are buying 6500 and 9000s and actually be able to say they can
identify with the problems of running a large datacenter. Running a 780
for your SWS district isn't the same! You can build up a level of
creditability that is impossible otherwise. It would also help the
average SWS person appreciate what it takes to service 3000 clients -
something the average SWS and Engineering person has no idea of yet is
more than willing to tell us what we do wrong. I know I didn't before
actually giving it a try!
-Ray
ps I still can't remember to say EIS. It's still SWS to me...
|
1382.13 | | SOLVIT::ALLEN_R | | Fri Mar 01 1991 20:55 | 9 |
| i used to have IS people in the group i worked in that would help me
get my job done.
now i have IS people outside my group that help when they can, but are
hindered by policy dictated by their management who think they are a
service organization but wouldn't know what the word meant if they had
to.
rich
|
1382.14 | | SUPER::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Sat Mar 02 1991 13:06 | 40 |
|
Disclaimer: absolutely no offense intended to anyone!
--------------------------------------------------------------------
...typical conversation between me and field person who wants my help:
FP: So what's your ALL-IN-1 address?
me: Well, most of us in Spitbrook don't have ALL-IN-1 accounts, but..
FP: What! How do you communicate?
me: Most of the people I need to exchange mail with have VAXmail
FP: You're kidding! That's [ wonderful/awful ] !
me: Well, it's ok with me, I'd rather have the computer resources
for development, but as I was saying, I think Spitbrook now
has a gateway...
FP: You folks in central [are still in the dark ages/ are so
arrogant/ are so lucky], doing things differently from the rest
of the company. Have you even SEEN ALL-IN-1? Our manager said
everyone had to have an ALL-IN-1 account!
me: Well, yes, as a matter of fact I used to write courses about
ALL-IN-1 and I think it has its uses. But our managers decided that
we could do our work pretty well without it. And Spitbrook
has a gateway that occasionally sends ALL-IN-1 mail to us...
try sending it to me @ZKO.
FP: mumble...one company, one message...network...Spitbrook...
VAXmail...mumble...support...VT100...car phones...mumble
me: I'll look for your mail, ok? If you have any trouble, there's
always the DTN!
|
1382.15 | Not a good idea... | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Sat Mar 02 1991 17:27 | 15 |
| re: .12
I don't know if sending EIS people to DIS to learn how to run a data
center is a very good idea. A few months ago there was a hardware
problem on our local DIS ALL-IN-1 cluster and we were informed that
all mail and documents received/created for the past week were gone.
Apparently, the organization chartered with providing supposedly vital
computing resources to the corporation hasn't learned about backups
yet.
In the ACT I'm responsible for, the only way my customers would lose a
weeks work would be if the whole building was destroyed, as our
complete backups go off site once a week.
Bob
|
1382.16 | ALL-IN-1 and VAXmail users can live together | RBW::WICKERT | MAA USIS Consultant | Sat Mar 02 1991 18:04 | 29 |
|
re: .15
Never said *all* DIS datacenters were a model of efficency. Look at it
as a chance for EIS to finally show DIS how it should be done!
Backups not going off-site aren't usually the problem. Doing backups of
already corrupt files seem to be the favoriate. Also, doing backups of
active ALL-IN-1 files are a common cause of lost data - you have
to shut it down for backups to be effective and many sites still aren't
doing that.
Also, depending on which I.S. manager you talk to he may or may not
include the OA systems as "vital or critical" applications. A mindset
that MUST change since most Sales Reps would rather lose most of the
their "business" systems than their OA systems.
re: .14
With a little understanding ALL-IN-1 and VAXmail users can co-exist,
even without gateways. You can import VAXmail received into ALL-IN-1
and you can send VAXmail *DIRECTLY* from ALL-IN-1. If you give that FP
your address and tell them to use it in the TO: field with an
underscore ("_") in front of it ALL-IN-1 will send it without touching
the Message Router. I do this all the time and still have it in my
ALL-IN-1 folders for future reference.
-Ray
|
1382.17 | | BRULE::MICKOL | Cleared by IRAQI Censors | Sun Mar 03 1991 00:41 | 14 |
| As a former Digital I.S. Manager of many years (and now an individual
contributor in Sales Support), I think its ridiculous that our Field ALL-IN-1
accounts are captive. Due to this policy we have more equipment than required,
i.e., we have separate systems for Site I.S. (DIS/IM&T), EIS, ACT, and a
plethora of personal and shared rotational equipment spread throughout the
District.
If someone did a computing needs analysis for the WHOLE district, I honestly
believe that we could implement a more cost-effective solution to provide the
necessary computing resources to the Field.
Regards,
Jim
|
1382.18 | Reactions to .8 | COUNT0::WELSH | What are the FACTS??? | Mon Mar 04 1991 07:45 | 166 |
| re .8:
> ALL-IN-1 is a good office system.
Agreed. Perhaps not as far out ahead of the competition as it was,
but still a leading product, and one which gave us all an object
lesson in the fact that getting to market on time is worth any amount
of gold plating (or even ordinary quality).
> It is certainly true that we sell lots of it (more revenue than any
> software except VMS & DECnet)
This is received wisdom, and I have been told it many times over
the last few years. Reluctant as I am to mix it with someone from
product management, I believe that in the UK at least, several
other product sets including CASE and TP brought in more software
revenue. ALL-IN-1 is probably right up there as a single product,
but it isn't really fair to compare it with any other single product
(if you doubt this, check out the size of the ALL-IN-1 kit).
ALL-IN-1 certainly levers a lot of hardware - this is because, as
I explained, it requires 5 times as much hardware as VMS for the same
number of users. This is good for us for a certain time. When
something comparable comes along that needs a lot less hardware,
who knows, it might become bad for us? ALL-IN-1 also brings in a lot
of service revenue, but if we had as many people trained to
deliver CASE services as there are trained on ALL-IN-1, that could
be quite profitable too. Unfortunately, we don't.
> a lot of times it is sold to people who do not know or want to know
> anything about computers. .6 is correct in suggesting that it is unusual
> for DEC to sell anything like that, but its success should perhaps
> indicate maybe we try to do more of it.
That's not quite what I said. For the record, I am not in the
least surprised that Digital sells a lot to people who aren't
interested in the internals and intricacies of computers. Of course
we do. Most customers are like that, and I'm all for it.
What I said was that I hope Digital's own employees do not fit
the description of "people who do not know or want to know anything
about computers". Whatever progressive business experts may tell
us, I believe that every salesman, specialist, engineer, consultant,
secretary, marketeer, manager and floor-cleaner who works for
Digital should know something about what we sell, and what's more
should be enthusiastic about it.
> I'm sure Tom is right that we spent $500 million on "vast VAXclusters" but
> I don't think it was motivated by the change to A1. When I joined the company
> in 1984, we didn't have much in the way of computing in field offices. The
> investment in field computing was something whose time had come. I think it
> is unfair and inappropriate to say that the need was predicated on the ALL-IN-1
> rollout. Those computers were needed because there WEREN'T ANY.
Here in the UK, ALL-IN-1 and IS followed the large-scale availability
of computers. The view at board level seemed to be "this is a huge
investment, let's have a special department of professionals to make
sure it isn't wasted". To my way of thinking, this demeaned our
existing expertise. It identified what managers like to call an
"overhead", i.e. something that is essential but not in an immediately
obvious way.
> Saying that ALL-IN-1 needs 5 times as much hardware as VMS is like saying
> that a banana isn't very good when used as a hammer. If the tool that you
> need is VMS, then you should have the access to VMS that you need. There are
> plenty of people in this company (I mean LOTS) for whom ALL-IN-1 is a useful
> tool upon which they rely to get their work done. For them, the amount of
> VMS resources consumed is irrelevant. They just want to get their job done.
No, it's like saying that ALL-IN-1 needs 5 times as much hardware
as VMS. My source, by the way, is an article written by the
corporate product manager for ALL-IN-1 and published in Sales
Update back in 1986. The article strongly advised sales people
*never* to sell an ALL-IN-1 system underconfigured with hardware,
as the long-term result would be a dissatisfied customer. Applying
the rules given in the Sales Update to my own office system, I
found we had an 11/785 with 12 megabytes, when we needed at least
2 8500s with 64 megabytes each. But the budget wouldn't run to
that.
This is like buying a Space Shuttle and saying "we can't afford the
proper fuel, we'll run it on ordinary gasoline". Results will be poor.
> Giving them the "more efficient" VMS would be pointless, as they wouldn't
> get anything done in the user unfriendly "$" environment.
Now this is the crux of my observations. Who the hell says "they"
won't get anything done? In my experience, it's the ALL-IN-1
environment that's "user unfriendly".
First of all, it stops me doing many things I need to do, because
the whole "captive menu system" philosophy assumes that the wise
system providers know at the outset all the things I might want to
do.
Secondly, it's extremely cryptic and unclear. Oh sure, if you take the
training, it's all laid out for you. But with that amount of training,
VMS would be fairly straightforward too.
Lastly, people don't want something that's set up for them by
benevolent authority - like a play-pen - especially when it runs
like a pig. Users normally prefer speed and freedom to any degree
of features. That's one reason why so many of them like UNIX(tm)
better than VMS. The fact stands - ALL-IN-1 systems too often run
like a pig - and that's because Digital cannot afford such an
expensive system, and we are running it underconfigured - across
the company as a whole (I am sure there are showcases where everything
goes smoothly).
> It's been our experience that none of the local office ALL-IN-1's
> provide site-specific capabilities (like order tracking) tailored to the
> needs of the people at that office. Of course, our customers do applications
> like that all the time.
I wonder why we don't have any of these "job-specific" customized
capabilities which are such a major feature of ALL-IN-1 and which
customers appreciate so much? I only ask because I want to know.
> I'm afraid this is simply not the case. I am on the ADD network and
> communicate to and from the production mail network via pretty much all
> mail agents that we sell.
Certainly, there
are gateways, and they work pretty well most of the time. But
business mail needs to be 100% reliable - and punctual. The
cooperation of VMS Mail with ALL-IN-1 mail is jury-rigged and
doesn't work very well, or always. To take just one example,
look at what happens when a message router goes away. All VMS
Mail sent to it just falls on the floor. Even NMAIL doesn't try
resending - it gives up. Of course, from VMS Mail, many of the
features of ALL-IN-1 Mail are not available. So when I get a
message sent to 999 people, I can only reply to the sender.
Incidentally, on two occasions now I have missed customer meetings
because an ALL-IN-1 mail message took more than 12 hours to travel
less than 40 miles. I could actually walk that fast.
> Totally incorrect. It may be that the implementation of ALL-IN-1 provided by
> DIS at your site do not provide access to ADA, CDA, publising, imaging, etc.
> That does not mean that ALL-IN-1 cannot interface to them, provide access to
> applications, allow total user manipulation of them, and in general allow full
> use of those tools by the person using ALL-IN-1.
I can access Ada and other software tools, only if I am granted
DCL access. As the base note pointed out, this is not generally
granted. Besides, what is the point of running ALL-IN-1 if its
only contribution is going to be to add about two minutes to
my login time, meanwhile chalking up several thousand direct
i/o operations and pagefaults, and then take up about a megabyte of
disk space while I do my real work in a spawned subprocess?
How do I get the benefits of CDA from a character cell terminal
which can't display DDIF or PostScript? How do I use publishing
or imaging tools from a cc terminal?
> What we need to see is a more responsive attitude among the people providing the
> hardware/software facilities (IS, DIS, or whatever they are) to the people
> who need those systems.
Agreed. One of my main points, however, was that the whole idea
of handing over Digital's computing facilities (aka lifeblood)
to a hierarchy of managers whose measurements do not reflect the
success of the business, was calculated to lead to a *less*
responsive attitude.
/Tom
|
1382.19 | ALL-IN-1, DIS, and you | A1VAX::BARTH | Special K | Mon Mar 04 1991 09:32 | 196 |
| One long reply deserves another, I suppose.
>> It is certainly true that we sell lots of it (more revenue than any
>> software except VMS & DECnet)
> This is received wisdom, and I have been told it many times over
> the last few years. Reluctant as I am to mix it with someone from
> product management, I believe that in the UK at least, several
> other product sets including CASE and TP brought in more software
> revenue. ALL-IN-1 is probably right up there as a single product,
> but it isn't really fair to compare it with any other single product
> (if you doubt this, check out the size of the ALL-IN-1 kit).
World-wide, Tom. The ALL-IN-1 kit most assuredly consists of many products.
We sell an awful lot of Message Router, Notes, FMS, etc, courtesy of that
ALL-IN-1 kit. Comparing "product sets" would include other things that are
not components of an ALL-IN-1 sale per se. These are things like 1-2-3/VMS,
DECwrite, etc. I am talking about ALL-IN-1 only. (Yes, ALL-IN-1 component
products get credited for revenue from sales from within the A1 kit. An A1
sale benefits many products.)
> ALL-IN-1 certainly levers a lot of hardware - this is because, as
> I explained, it requires 5 times as much hardware as VMS for the same
> number of users. This is good for us for a certain time. When
> something comparable comes along that needs a lot less hardware,
> who knows, it might become bad for us? ALL-IN-1 also brings in a lot
> of service revenue, but if we had as many people trained to
> deliver CASE services as there are trained on ALL-IN-1, that could
> be quite profitable too. Unfortunately, we don't.
I'll take what works now. It might become bad for us, but it isn't and it
hasn't in 8 years. (10 years if you count the time it was sold as a SWS
service.) Getting people trained on CASE is irrelevant to the ALL-IN-1 service
revenue. The A1 service delivery people are ALWAYS BUSY. There is no lag
in CASE service revenue because of extraneous A1 bodies sitting around.
> That's not quite what I said. For the record, I am not in the
> least surprised that Digital sells a lot to people who aren't
> interested in the internals and intricacies of computers. Of course
> we do. Most customers are like that, and I'm all for it.
Sorry. That's what I thought my eyes saw.
> What I said was that I hope Digital's own employees do not fit
> the description of "people who do not know or want to know anything
> about computers". Whatever progressive business experts may tell
> us, I believe that every salesman, specialist, engineer, consultant,
> secretary, marketeer, manager and floor-cleaner who works for
> Digital should know something about what we sell, and what's more
> should be enthusiastic about it.
I couldn't agree more. It is very disheartening to see the level of ignorance
about the most basic of our products among our non-technical colleagues.
>> Giving them the "more efficient" VMS would be pointless, as they wouldn't
>> get anything done in the user unfriendly "$" environment.
>
> Now this is the crux of my observations. Who the hell says "they"
> won't get anything done? In my experience, it's the ALL-IN-1
> environment that's "user unfriendly".
There are lot of people out there who cannot "$" their way out of a paper
bag, Tom! You're missing my point. I AGREE that people who need VMS should
have access to it. But there are a lot of people in DEC who find A1 to be
most beneficial as an interface between themselves and their computers.
These people need and want A1. Other people, like me, prefer to use BOTH
environments as they have the skills and the tasks which make both VMS and
A1 appropriate to what they do. And some people don't need A1 at all. They
certainly shouldn't be forced to use it if they don't have any reason to.
> First of all, it stops me doing many things I need to do, because
> the whole "captive menu system" philosophy assumes that the wise
> system providers know at the outset all the things I might want to
> do.
Don't use it. You are not the target audience for this product. There are
still 4 million CUSTOMERS who think this an appropriate way of approaching
their computing needs.
> Secondly, it's extremely cryptic and unclear. Oh sure, if you take the
> training, it's all laid out for you. But with that amount of training,
> VMS would be fairly straightforward too.
I don't think so, Tom. We have secretaries and managers and other
folks who have no computer background trained and doing useful work in
4 hours. I doubt I could have even the remotest chance of doing that
in the $ environment. Of course, if you've already got your computer
science degree, that's another story. A PDP-11 background doesn't hurt,
either. :^)
Those people who feel that the interface is "cryptic and unclear" change
the interface! I've seen ALL-IN-1 implementations where the customer chose
not to use any of the screens as we provide them out of the box. That is
as it should be - the strength of A1 is in making it appropriate to the
environment where it lives.
> Lastly, people don't want something that's set up for them by
> benevolent authority - like a play-pen - especially when it runs
> like a pig. Users normally prefer speed and freedom to any degree
> of features. That's one reason why so many of them like UNIX(tm)
> better than VMS.
Ooops, Tom! You're WAY out of touch on this one. OUR WHOLE CUSTOMER BASE
CONSISTS OF SITES WHICH DISAGREE (with their checkbooks) WITH YOU ON THE ABOVE
CONTENTION.
Remember, somewhere between 1/3 and 1/2 of all VMS users have an ALL-IN-1
account. The techies like UNIX. More power to them. As UNIX becomes mandated
and popular in our commercial accounts (will it?) I suppose that the
non-technical people will expect software analogues to A1 in that environment
as well.
> The fact stands - ALL-IN-1 systems too often run
> like a pig - and that's because Digital cannot afford such an
> expensive system, and we are running it underconfigured - across
> the company as a whole (I am sure there are showcases where everything
> goes smoothly).
Cf, RBW::(Ray)Wickert. We've got a lot of things to do yet before that
assertion can be stated with accuracy. Maybe it's your experience. It's
not mine. There are certainly some big clusters. They can run well. And
there are some not-so-big systems that should-be-big. In any case, the local
implementation decisions have a LOT to say about the happiness of the user
population.
> I wonder why we don't have any of these "job-specific" customized
> capabilities which are such a major feature of ALL-IN-1 and which
> customers appreciate so much? I only ask because I want to know.
Because DIS doesn't have one or more of the following: the talent, the
training, the time, the desire to support things locally, the trust in EIS to
allow EIS to make the changes, the charter or metrics to really make their
users HAPPY.
Yes, it's a hot button. And yes it's a major feature of A1 that customers
appreciate so much.
> Certainly, there
>> are gateways, and they work pretty well most of the time. But
> business mail needs to be 100% reliable - and punctual. The
> cooperation of VMS Mail with ALL-IN-1 mail is jury-rigged and
> doesn't work very well, or always. To take just one example,
> look at what happens when a message router goes away. All VMS
> Mail sent to it just falls on the floor. Even NMAIL doesn't try
> resending - it gives up. Of course, from VMS Mail, many of the
> features of ALL-IN-1 Mail are not available. So when I get a
> message sent to 999 people, I can only reply to the sender.
When a message router goes away, your user agent is responsible for storing
and retrying. Blaming this on A1 (which is not in the picture) is silly and
blaming it on message router is inaccurate.
It's like handing your mail to Joe Bloggs and asking him to post it for you.
Then when he brings it back and says, "I didn't do it" you're blaming the
postal service. Sorry. Get someone more reliable.
There are many other advantages of store-and-forward systems and full function
user agents. You may or may not need those advantages. For many people in
DEC, VMSmail is a appropriate utility.
> I can access Ada and other software tools, only if I am granted
> DCL access. As the base note pointed out, this is not generally
> granted. Besides, what is the point of running ALL-IN-1 if its
> only contribution is going to be to add about two minutes to
> my login time, meanwhile chalking up several thousand direct
> i/o operations and pagefaults, and then take up about a megabyte of
> disk space while I do my real work in a spawned subprocess?
You need DCL access. If it is not attainable on the A1 system, you need to
change the A1 management or change systems. There is no point in YOUR running
ALL-IN-1. The point of A1 is for the other people who do need it. The
implementation about which you are flaming is bad. ALL-IN-1 is not really
the issue. People are the issue.
> How do I get the benefits of CDA from a character cell terminal
> which can't display DDIF or PostScript? How do I use publishing
> or imaging tools from a cc terminal?
The benefits of CDA? Use imaging & publishing tools? Surely your point is
that a workstation is appropriate for the work you do. I would be last to
disagree. Your being locked into ALL-IN-1 in the cc world has nothing to do
with your need for a workstation. I hope!
FWIW, A1 does know how to display the text of DDIF documents on cc terminals.
And if you are running on an X-term or workstation, A1 can allow you to make,
edit, display, and store DDIF and PS from within ALL-IN-1.
> One of my main points, however, was that the whole idea
> of handing over Digital's computing facilities (aka lifeblood)
> to a hierarchy of managers whose measurements do not reflect the
> success of the business, was calculated to lead to a *less*
> responsive attitude.
And it has. Must have been a successful decision, eh? :^(
K.
|
1382.20 | Or are you case-sensitive? | DENTON::AMARTIN | Alan H. Martin | Mon Mar 04 1991 11:15 | 21 |
| Re .19:
>There are still 4 million CUSTOMERS who think [A1 is] an appropriate way of
^^^^^^^^^
>approaching their computing needs.
...
>Those people who feel that the interface is "cryptic and unclear" change
>the interface! I've seen ALL-IN-1 implementations where the customer chose
^^^^^^^^
>not to use any of the screens as we provide them out of the box. ...
Either:
1. We have over 4000000 A1 accounts.
-or-
2. Internal Digital users aren't prevented from accessing basic applications on
their A1 systems by system management fiat - they merely don't know how to
customize A1 to give them access to DCL, etc.
-or-
3. Your definition of the word "customer" is inconsistant.
/AHM
|
1382.21 | Depends on your glasses | SHALOT::HUSSEY | Harry the JOAT | Mon Mar 04 1991 14:17 | 18 |
| Not inconsistant, just context-sensitive ;^).
What we have is over 4 million customer desktops (end users) of the
ALL-IN-1 Integrated Office System. This is the actual design center
for the product. It is an end-user system.
In the larger sense, many of our customers (IS departments, whatever)
have tailored the software to fit their end-users' business needs. This
may entail writing entirely new systems or giving the user a PC
"look-and-feel" user interface.
All depends on the granularity of your view.
Funny how discussions of this product rapidly approach the level of a
religious debate.
David
|
1382.22 | RE: .20 | A1VAX::BARTH | Special K | Mon Mar 04 1991 16:05 | 11 |
| I hope .21 helps.
I probably should have been clearer in my note. We have 4M people using
ALL-IN-1 at customer sites.
Customer sites frequently choose to modify A1. The work is usually done
by programmers. Note that most programmers who do change ALL-IN-1 are
avid fans of the product. From my experience, that seems to be because
they can get applications written very quickly with A1.
K.
|
1382.23 | Ok, so she's a dog... | BIGJOE::DMCLURE | Reborn DECie | Mon Mar 04 1991 21:09 | 18 |
| ALL-IN-1 has probably been around as long as I have been
at DEC as I recall we simulated miniature ALL-IN-1 menus for the
"Sloane-Wentworth Sale" salesperson's desk scene of the IVIS course
I programmed back in 1984-85 for Sales Training.
What gets me is that in all of this time, I've never even had
the [opportunity?] to use ALL-IN-1 as it has never been available on
any of the time-sharing systems I've ever had accounts on (and I'm not
about to dedicate my workstation to ALL-IN-1). It's sad, but I have
an easier time sending electronic mail across the Internet to my wife
and family than I do sending mail to anyone @FOO.
Since I have no real ALL-IN-1 experience, I can't participate in
the ALL-IN-1 bashing, but if it is truely a resource hog, then why is
it that after all this time nobody has seen fit to re-engineer the
product so that it could be optimized for better performance?
-davo
|
1382.24 | BACKUP isn't the issue | SCAACT::RESENDE | Digital, thriving on chaos? | Mon Mar 04 1991 22:00 | 21 |
| re: .15
>center is a very good idea. A few months ago there was a hardware
>problem on our local DIS ALL-IN-1 cluster and we were informed that
>all mail and documents received/created for the past week were gone.
Bob,
The problem isn't backups per se. ALL-IN-1 doesn't really have a good
mechanism for incrementally restoring an account or system to a
particular point in time. I've had a specific document 'lost' and when
I've tried to get IM&T (DIS) to restore it, they couldn't, even though
they knew it was on a backup tape. BACKUP works fine for VMS, but for
ALL-IN-1 you need something that understands the file cabinet DOCDB. I
am not convinced that this particular shortcoming has been addressed --
certainly, integrity of data in ALL-IN-1 doesn't rival a database, even
though it certainly has equally valuable information to the
corporation.
Ducking,
Steve
|
1382.25 | Use what you need | BEAGLE::WOOD | Are you sure this is the way???? | Tue Mar 05 1991 04:09 | 31 |
|
If You "lost" a document, it IS possible to get it back. The degree of
corruption and time between backups may limit the amount of information
retrieved. For example if you recieve a mail a 10am and the disk is
wiped out at 11am then you've lost the mail. Exactly the same as if
you'd recieved it in VAXmail.
If you recieve a document 10am one day the disks are incrementally
backed up that night, and then lost the next day, you can still get all
the information back....
The easiest part to get back is the text of a document/mail message, it
may take a bit more work to get all the attributres of a mail message
back, but it can be done.
BTW I'm in ALL-IN-1 support so I do no what I'm talking about.
Re Tom(?) It appears you don't need ALL-IN-1 to do your job, so you
shouldn't be using it. Don't blame ALL-IN-1 for your management
problems, your problem is ONLY your managment, if they won't give you
the tools you need to do your job.
As for your problems with a mail taking 12 hours to cover 40 miles
how would that change using Nmail or VMS mail if the Sending/recieving
nodes where down? At least with ALL-IN-1 the sender could put
delivery/read reciepts on the mail and have let you know that the mail
hadn't arrived, the sender chose not to do this. ALL-IN-1 provides the
functionality if people don't use it that is not the products fault.
Cheers,
Andy
|
1382.26 | appropriate conferences to continue some of this.... | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy Leslie, CSSE | Tue Mar 05 1991 06:05 | 21 |
| ALL-IN-1 & PostScript Printing REGENT::A1_PRINT_COMPAT_KIT 2740
ALL-IN-1 Applic Prog Wishes IOSG::ALLIN1_APR_WISH 801
ALL-IN-1 CM Clearing House POMPEO::CMHOUSE 2695
ALL-IN-1 Shared File Cab. OAXTRA::A1SFCP 1560
ALL-IN-1 Sys for Business Oper. SHALOT::SBO 420
ALL-IN-1 Sys for Customer Serv SHALOT::SCS 1946
ALL-IN-1 Sys for Sales & Mkting SHALOT::SSM 400
ALL-IN-1 System for Exec. Serv. OAXTRA::A1SES 1561
ALL-IN-1 Technical Doc. IOSG::ALL-IN-1_DOCUMENTATION 2338
ALL-IN-1 Tools UKCSSE::A1TOOLS 2878
ALL-IN-1 V2.4 Support OAWEGO::ALL-IN-1 365
ALL-IN-1 V2.n Wishlist IOSG::ALLIN1_WISH 800
ALL-IN-1 in DECwindows (Mica) SHALOT::MICA 2469
PC/ALL-IN-1 Europe PAMPAM::PCA1_EU 697
VAXtel/ALL-IN-1 (U.K.) MAJORS::VAXTEL 1146
Voice Messaging (ALL-IN-1) SILK::VOICEMESSAGING 1597
ALL-IN-1 V2 Support OAXTRA::ALLIN1_V2 365
ALL-IN-1 V2.3 Support OAWEGO::ALL-IN-1_V23 365
ALLIN1_V2, Volume 1 OAXTRA::ALLIN1_V2_OLD 365
DECmail to ALL-IN-1 Migration ASABET::TECH_MIG 1612
Old ALL-IN-1 V2 Support OAXTRA::OLD_ALLIN1_V2 366
|
1382.27 | I missed the A1_BASHING conference in that list | A1VAX::BARTH | Special K | Tue Mar 05 1991 08:20 | 8 |
| RE: .-1
You are right that the more specific product-related issues can be taken
to other conferences.
Most of this discussion seems relevant to this note stream, though.
K.
|
1382.28 | Why move conferences? | BEAGLE::WOOD | Are you sure this is the way???? | Tue Mar 05 1991 08:26 | 9 |
|
Actually most (if not all) of those conferences are not suitable places
for continuing any part of the contents of the notes so far. I think
this is probably one of the more valid conferences. The problem
discussed is one of perception and use, not of a fault in the product.
Cheers,
Andy
|
1382.29 | some day... | XANADU::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Tue Mar 05 1991 18:15 | 19 |
| re Note 1382.23 by BIGJOE::DMCLURE:
> Since I have no real ALL-IN-1 experience, I can't participate in
> the ALL-IN-1 bashing, but if it is truely a resource hog, then why is
> it that after all this time nobody has seen fit to re-engineer the
> product so that it could be optimized for better performance?
Probably because it's been so successful in its current form.
We are, in fact, in the midst of major re-implementation of
ALL-IN-1 to divide it into user interface clients and
sharable and distributable services. This work has
proceeded in fits and starts for most of the past 4 years or
so. It is so extensive that what will result will in fact be
a new system -- one hopes it will have lots of compatibility
with the old, while doing every new thing demanded by today's
market!
Bob
|
1382.30 | Good Product ... Once You Understand It | BOSACT::EARLY | Cruising Through Momentum | Tue Mar 05 1991 20:51 | 19 |
| I love the product. I have implemented a numer of custom solutions that
I, and members of my group, have used consistently for a long time. The
applications include taking phone messages via screens that become mail
messages to the recipient, monthly reporting, an "electronic roladex",
an automated JV process, and others.
The ability to spend a few hours at a terminal and impact the
productivity of a number of people for an entire fiscal year more than
makes up for the "resource hog" bashing that the product takes, IMHO.
The problem I've seen with the product is that it is installed as a
layered product and .... well, that's it. In its off-the-shelf format
it is a good product. If one takes the time to understand what it can
do when customized, it takes on a whole new life. Very few groups
within the company use it that way ... unfortunately.
/se
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1382.31 | Nothing's perfect.... | RBW::WICKERT | MAA USIS Consultant | Tue Mar 05 1991 23:13 | 28 |
|
BTW, I'm more than willing to admit there is a significant management
problem with DIS in this company, at least in the U.S.
One of the problems is that IM&T doesn't work for any of our customers,
not "really" at least. The only place the reporting structure comes
together is U.S. Country. Now, we all know that's a major reason Sales
Support moved over into Sales, right? You can't get good service unless
you have direct control or, or impact over, the service organization. A
manager of US IM&T was just named and he sits on Zerekski's (sp) staff
which may help in the long run but it's still a pain in the field.
Another problem is that even though a client of IM&T were to show up at
our door with a sackfull of money we wouldn't be able to do anything
more for him. We can't purchase equipment without Country or Corporate
controlling it - we can't hire without Country and so on. It'd be great
if IM&T could over a system management service for all those
workstations sitting on secretarys desk and it would make GREAT sense
for the entire corporation but it's almost impossible to do it. You
could go around asking for .25 of a body here and .25 there but that
won't work. Very frustrating to see something that would help everyone
and not be able to do it because of the accounting systems in use...
-Ray
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1382.32 | accounting barriers cause inefficiencies | SAUTER::SAUTER | John Sauter | Wed Mar 06 1991 08:11 | 33 |
| re: .31---``Very frustrating to see something that would help everyone
and not be able to do it because of the accounting systems in use...''
It happens all the time. Here's a story I was told at the lunch table
recently. One of our larger software products was still supporting
RX50s as a distribution medium. This was a major source of pain
because of the large number of floppies required for this product and
that led to unreliability, since the chances of a bad spot on one of
the 25 or so floppies was pretty high.
The engineering manager learned that there were only four customers
still using RX50s, but he couldn't convince the person who controls
such things to give the customers better equipment so he could drop
RX50 support, even though the savings to the company would have been
significant, because the groups who would benefit can't give away
equipment, and the groups who can give away equipment wouldn't see
any any of the benefits.
He got his way by threatening to purchase the equipment using his own
capital equipment budget, and send it to the cusomers. His threat
was credible because of the small number of customers involved, and
so the right thing happened. (He didn't actually have to do this.)
Sorry to be vague but I don't have the permission of the person who
told me the story to use his name. Take this as just an anecdote,
to illustrate the kinds of things that happen. To solve this kind
of problem you need something like a product line manager with the
authority to move money between equipment and service budgets when
that makes overall financial sense. I'd like such a person to have
even more authority---to decide, for example, between purchasing
something or hiring someone.
John Sauter
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1382.33 | To do the right thing, or not to do the right thing? | COUNT0::WELSH | What are the FACTS??? | Wed Mar 06 1991 11:41 | 48 |
| re .0:
Oh, by the way, I forgot to answer the base note. IMHO, if
your system manager does not give you "$ privilege" from
ALL-IN-1, he or she does not intend you to use VMS. This is
usually the case. That means that (in the UK at least) it is
quite conceivable that getting to the $ could be a criminal
offence.
However, even that doesn't necessarily mean you shouldn't do it.
Because both this company and the law of computing are seriously
confused. The people who passed that law appear to believe that you
can "break in" to a computer in something other than a figurative
sense. They may have watched "Tron", and they certainly wouldn't
recognize a metaphor if it bit them. A lot of the people who run
this company do themselves run on little iron rails, holding a
book of rules up to their faces so that they can't see the real world.
The "right" approach is to ask your manager to ask the system manager to
give you DCL access. But in some facilities this has to go through
a committee which only meets every month (honest!) and you have
to "justify" your need to people who
(a) Don't understand or care about what you are trying to
do.
(b) Are measured on security, which they think will decrease
about 98% with people jumping around doing COPY commands
and having direct access to printer queues, etc.
So don't hold your breath, and be prepared to get very unpopular
very quickly.
On a percentage basis, then, it may pay off better to just "Do It".
The base note remains a very pointed question which goes to the
heart of much of our ineffectiveness as a corporation.
Which brings me to .32:
This reminded me of the time a couple of years ago when UK
CASE Marketing discovered the National Computer Centre. This
business publishes a Guide to software tools, and demos tools
from anyone who cares to lodge them in the Centre. It took over
a year to get a VAXstation and some software in there, for exactly
the same reason as given in .32 - those who stood to benefit
couldn't do it, and those who could do it didn't stand to benefit.
This, I hope, is where Entrepreneurs come in.
/Tom
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1382.34 | This one's easy | SMAUG::GARROD | An Englishman's mind works best when it is almost too late | Wed Mar 06 1991 22:52 | 21 |
| If you believe that you having access to DCL is the right thing for the
company then do it. Here's why I say this. Follow these two scenarios:
1, You ask permission for access to DCL
You spend a lot of effort convincing productivity
prevention people/committees of your need. Eventually
you win.
2, You just do it
Eventually a bureaucrat finds out what you've done. He
exerts a lot of effort in trying to get DCL taken away from
you or you reprimanded. Eventually you win because you
are clearly doing THE RIGHT THING.
The outcome of the 2 scenarios is identical. But in scenario 1 your
timer is wasted. In scenario 2 an unproductive bureaucrats time is
wasted. Hence the way to go is clear.
Dave
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1382.35 | Amen! | BOSACT::EARLY | Hey Mister: Wanna buy a Framework? | Thu Mar 07 1991 18:58 | 8 |
| RE: .34
My sentiments, exactly! Well put. If a committe has nothing better to
do than decide if someone can have access to DCL or not, we're in REAL
trouble!
/se
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1382.36 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Mon Apr 15 1991 09:35 | 27 |
| > Oh, by the way, I forgot to answer the base note. IMHO, if
> your system manager does not give you "$ privilege" from
> ALL-IN-1, he or she does not intend you to use VMS. This is
> usually the case. That means that (in the UK at least) it is
> quite conceivable that getting to the $ could be a criminal
> offence.
Operations follow the policies of the Board of Management, they also
have to follow corporate and local audit requirements. It is not the
system managers decision to give you $ access or not, they follow the
policies and decisions for that country.
> The "right" approach is to ask your manager to ask the system manager to
> give you DCL access. But in some facilities this has to go through
> a committee which only meets every month (honest!) and you have
> to "justify" your need to people who
>
> (a) Don't understand or care about what you are trying to
> do.
> (b) Are measured on security, which they think will decrease
> about 98% with people jumping around doing COPY commands
> and having direct access to printer queues, etc.
If you want to improve the situation, tackle the decision makers,
not the messenger.
Heather
|