T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
88.1 | A Suggestion | AUNTB::BOOTH | A career of MISunderstanding | Wed Mar 09 1988 22:35 | 9 |
| Check with DB/ACCESS in Cupertino, CA. They were supposed to have
finished their MS-DOS interface late last year. They also interface
to Rdb and DBMS (both via Datatrieve) with an Application Program
Interface that is SQL-based. The prdouct handles access to
heterogeneous databases in heterogeneous environments.
It might help you given your requirements.
Phone: 1-800-982-9911
---- Michael Booth
|
88.2 | One More Try | AUNTB::BOOTH | A career of MISunderstanding | Wed Mar 09 1988 22:36 | 3 |
| Real clever! Iforgot the product name. It's Access/Star from DB/ACCESS.
---- Michael Booth
|
88.3 | Official source | BANZAI::HIGGS | Festooned with DMLs | Thu Mar 10 1988 01:19 | 3 |
| Also, contact the Database Languages Product Manager, Wendy NOVA::Caswell.
There are things happening, but you need to contact her to find out what may
be relevant to your situation.
|
88.4 | There are 3rd-party products | CREDIT::STEINER | | Thu Mar 10 1988 01:57 | 8 |
| Also, there is a product from Network Innovations, (come on, somebody
knows the name) that lets you access Rdb/VMS from PCs.
Also, Alisa systems has announced VAX SQL support from the MAC with
there SQL-link product (not available yet, but announced).
Jim
|
88.5 | CL/1 | AUNTB::BOOTH | A career of MISunderstanding | Thu Mar 10 1988 04:16 | 4 |
| The Network Innovations product is called CL/1, I think. Apple bought
Network Innovations last week.
---- Michael Booth
|
88.6 | Multiplex | NOVA::BERENSON | Rdb/VMS - Number ONE on VAX | Thu Mar 10 1988 16:27 | 15 |
| >< Note 88.5 by AUNTB::BOOTH "A career of MISunderstanding" >
> -< CL/1 >-
>
> The Network Innovations product is called CL/1, I think. Apple bought
> Network Innovations last week.
>
> ---- Michael Booth
Almost. CL/1 is the name for the interface between PC software and a
host. I don't think it exists yet, except as the inner guts of a
product called MULTIPLEX which Network Innovations has been selling for
a little over a year. MULTIPLEX allows an MSDOS-based PC to access all
sorts of data on VAXen, including VAX Rdb/VMS.
|
88.7 | Thanks folks... | FURILO::AMELI | | Mon Mar 14 1988 17:23 | 7 |
| Thank folks...
I called up Network Innovation (408-257-6800), they are sending
me information on their products. The only thing is that I much
rather go with a CMP solution!
Thanks for all the help!
Ali
|
88.8 | Any more candidates? | UHURU::LAMBERT | i listen to the wind | Thu May 05 1988 15:09 | 53 |
| Hi,
I'm project leader for a "solution system". We're in phase 0 now and I'm
working on the alternatives and feasibility document. The "solution" will
consist of a bunch of diskless PC's connected to a VAXserver 3500. There's
going to be a relational database maintained on the VAXserver for shared access
by the PC's. There are a lot of programs which have to get developed to run
on the PC's which will have to access the VAXserver database for read and write
transactions. I had planned to use Rdb/VMS for the VAXserver Db manager, and
PCSA as the DECnet environment which links up the PC's and the server, but I
don't have any clue as to what's needed to develop PC based MS-DOS programs
that access an Rdb/VMS database running on the PC server node of a diskless PC
network. I put a note in the Rdb conference but it seems that there's no
Rdb/DOS planned and someone there recommended this note in this conference.
What I need for the document that I'm working on is a list of DEC and 3rd party
products that are required to allow MD-DOS program development of programs
which access an Rdb database. Normally, I would use a language compiler and a
run time library of Rdb database access routines.
For the feasibility part of my document, I only need one instance of a list
of products needed to do this (and how much it will cost to include them in
the solution).
For the alternatives part of my document, several instances will be needed.
So far from this note I've got
product company in-DEC supported
name name, etc. contact compilers
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Access/Star DB/ACCESS
Cupertino, Ca
1-800-982-9911
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
??????? DEC's Database Wendy Casswell
Languages Product NOVA::CASWELL
Group
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
MULTIPLEX Network Innovations
408-257-6800
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Q1: Are there folks in DEC I should be channeling my queries through for
these products?
Q2: Are there any others I should be investigating?
-bob lambert-
financial industries systems group
pdm1-1, marlboro, ma.
dtn 291-0301
|
88.9 | One More | QUILL::BOOTH | A Career in MISunderstanding | Fri May 06 1988 02:02 | 19 |
| Another possibility is Gateway Systems on Okemos, MI. (517-349-7740).
Their product will let the front-end processes run on the PCs. It
can also allow parts of the database to be downloaded to the PCs
for processing efficiency. Last time I talked to them, they were
ready to go with the VAX version that would link to Rdb/VMS (they
originally ran on HP hardware). The product is called the Synergist.
It looks very interesting...has a 4GL-type development environment
that runs on a PC. Then the code gets uploaded to the VAX host.
I have some literature, but it's about 8 months old. They were supposed
to display at the December, 1987 DEXpo. It might be worth
investigating.
The Network Innovations product is CL/1. It is the "guts" of Multiplex.
Multiplex is a specific product aimed at transferring data from
databases to spreadsheets. CL/1 is aimed at connectivity of PCs
and host databases.
---- Michael Booth
|
88.10 | You'll never get what you don't ask for | BANZAI::BERENSON | Rdb/VMS - Number ONE on VAX | Fri May 27 1988 14:41 | 1 |
| and definitely talk to Wendy before going down the 3rd party path.
|