T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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967.1 | CYTROL, Inc. - Contacts as of Jan 91 | ACESMK::RLEE | | Thu Aug 01 1991 21:35 | 12 |
| CYTROL, INC.
4620 West 77th St.
Minneapolis, MN 55435
Phone: (612)-835-4884 FAX: (612)-830-0598
Established 1969. Employees as of Jan 91 = 65
Chairman/CEO/Pres: Keith A. Peterson
VP Mktg/Sales: David Wiley
Promotion Dir: Barbara Gurstelle
|
967.2 | CYX is marketed by HN Corp. | ACESMK::RLEE | | Thu Aug 01 1991 21:38 | 10 |
| CYX is actually produced by HN Corp.
HN Corporation
5100 Edina Industrial Blvd.
Edina, MN 55439
Phone: (612)-893-1848
Pres: Michael T. Helland
VP Mktg: Robert W. Nelson
|
967.3 | CYX from HN Corp: PDP-11 & VAX TP & Database Software | ACESMK::RLEE | | Thu Aug 01 1991 21:43 | 15 |
| CYX Transaction Processing System is billed as both a communications
monitor and a database manager.
It appears to be configurable for both VAX's and PDP-11's and requires
256 kilobytes of main memory. Source code is in MACRO (!).
It's been shipping since 1979 - pre-relational db's - and costs
somewhere between $30k-$50k.
It claims to support 1,000 terminals max - and both VT and 3270
terminal protocols.
Performance reports are available on request.
[cf: Data Sources: Software 1st Edition 1991 - Volume 2, pp. I-67]
|
967.4 | Great replies! is there more technical stuff? | NCBOOT::OUSTAD | Miles Oustad, NCD EIS | Thu Aug 01 1991 22:11 | 13 |
| RLEE -- what is your name?
Anyway, thanks for the input. I've mailed you a message in response
to your mail message. Looking for more of the technical stuff.
Performance reports would be great. We here in NCD are embarking on a
project to move a customer from CYX to Rdb and I'll be involved in the
database design. I felt the more I know about this CYX product the
smoother the conversion will go.
So, any technical info will be great.
Thanks again,
Miles.
|
967.5 | RLEE == -bob leeRLEE == -bob leeRLEE == bob lee | ACESMK::RLEE | | Sat Aug 03 1991 21:02 | 6 |
| ah ... right, name .... -bob lee- ... which happens to currently
coincide with at least 6 other "bob lee"'s in the corporation.
the "bob lee" who survived the bony crash of '86 where the txn seq no
rolled over into negative numbers... one of 5 memorable 36 hour days in
my life ...
|
967.6 | misinterpreted abstract in _DATA_SOURCES | ACESMK::RLEE | | Fri Aug 16 1991 02:53 | 6 |
| Oops ... "performance reports available" ... means that the system
tracks the elapsed time of transactions performed against their
transaction manager.
HN Corporation is a 2-person operation and doesn't really have a
marketing arm to fund publishable benchmarks.
|
967.7 | CYX Abstract | SOJU::RLEE | | Wed Aug 21 1991 17:12 | 43 |
| Spoke to Bob Nelson, VP Mktg at HN Corporation:
Product status: 5-years in maintenance mode since take over of product
from CYTROL, Inc.
Product target: MIS shops that wish to use VAX's or PDP's as
inexpensive data-entry transaction processors
instead of IBM 30xx mainframes. Generally,
customers have a pre-existing IBM application
running on CICS and IMS. CYX is designed to
support CICS and IMS functionalities on VAX's.
Applications on CYX: airline reservation service, credit card
membership service, subscription service,
stock exchange trading systems, etc.
Current marketing effort is: $0 per year.
Product feature:
CYX-DC is the data communication transaction manager for the system.
It supports IBM 3270 bisynch terminal protocol and SDLC - ONLY.
Asynch terminal support for VT's is not provided. Support for bisynch
terminals requires installation of a CIMPACT (?) controller on VAX's.
The result is a decrease in the number of interrupts required to
service terminals - allowing higher CPU throughput to support
applications. Applications written for CYX-DC must reside on exactly
one VAX-node in a VAXcluster. Application Programming Interface calls
are made by application code that is targetted for management by
CYX-DC.
CYX-DB is the database manager for the system.
It supports hierarchical networked database schemas. Its
interface is strictly an application programming interface. It
supports transaction recovery mechanisms using logfiles, disk
shadowing, and logging to tape. It only supports fixed record
length records.
Quoted performance:
Single VAX 8650 is supporting 300 tps of complex transactions with .3
second response time for 90%. Cited application is an airline reservation
system.
|
967.8 | Many thanks..... | NCBOOT::OUSTAD | Miles Oustad, NCD EIS | Wed Aug 21 1991 17:52 | 19 |
| Bob,
Thanks for the info and the mail messages. Sorry I haven't gotten back
to you sooner. As things stand right now, I'm not working on that
account as another piece of business that I have been persuing has come
in so I am the project lead for that. That business will take me
through Oct. 1 (maybe slightly longer depending upon how things go).
After that, I may be back to looking at this CYX conversion, though, so
your info will come in handy then. If you should come across any more,
please forward on - I'll definitely appreciate it.
Again, thanks very much for your persuit of this matter that I figured
no-one would really care much about (or know anything about either).
I don't get into notes every day, so sometimes it may seem like I'm not
responding. I try to catch up every now and then.
Thanks again,
Miles.
|
967.9 | Welcome! Contact me for access to docset... | SOJU::RLEE | | Wed Aug 21 1991 18:10 | 20 |
| Welcome!
I'm just another megalomaniac TP driver ... I like systems that
are lean, mean, and fast - as well as software-fault tolerant - and
responsibly designed for human care and feeding.
[Having done data-entry myself to support my college years... ]
I positively detest software that can "barf" all over a disk farm...
-bob lee-
PS: I have received a saveset of their docset from Bob Nelson.
It is for Digital Internal Use only. Interested?
PPS: For other readers - it isn't necessary to use CYX-DC with CYX-DB.
There's no reason at all why you couldn't just make SQLPRE or
RDBPRE supported calls to Rdb/VMS. Then again, I wouldn't expect
CYX-DC to implicitly support DECdtm as Rdb/VMS does at this time.
|
967.10 | You bet I'm interested.. | NCBOOT::OUSTAD | Miles Oustad, NCD EIS | Wed Aug 21 1991 18:25 | 10 |
| RE: .9
Bob,
Yes, I'm definitely interested. But I don't necessarily need it
immediately. At your convienence, maybe you could mail me the location
and I could ftsv it to my machine.
Thanks,
Miles.
|
967.11 | what about bob? | NCBOOT::LITASI | to the land of Gitchi-Goommie.... | Thu Sep 05 1991 20:54 | 20 |
| I'm just catching up on these notes...a word to the wise about CYX
and Bob Nelson.
Bob Nelson is currently supporting the airline reservation system of
*our* customer (they are on a Vax 9000 now, btw). He is doing some
on-going consulting and we will be replacing the CYX rez system over
the next year + probably with ACMS/Rdb/DECforms. Bob is not exactly
happy over the prospect of loosing his cash cow. (this is the same
customer that Miles is talking about)
I have heard that Bob has been saying negative things about Rdb to the
customer.
The main problem for the customer is the inability to retrieve data
from there database. They have to write a program for everything.
That is why we are helping them convert it to Rdb. I have completed
a requirements document for all of their systems. This week, another
deccie and I have begun work on a functional spec for the reservations
system.
|
967.12 | some thoughts re .-1 | JENEVR::RLEE | | Tue Sep 10 1991 23:44 | 60 |
| [Moderator: permission to remove this reply is granted.]
Let's remember our manners here:
When working with Digital's 3rd-parties - let's not get upset if their
marketing messages are sometimes as confused as our own. Always partner
them, because they may have things that we may want to own.
There's TP and there's DB. CYX might have your TP part - now. Saves
you money. Now.
TP requires a close match to the client's business organization.
DB requires a close match to the client's business model.
A good model will provide good answers to good queries.
A good organization gets the work done satisfactorily - with a profit.
Often the organization won't match the model.
Especially when business conditions change.
So - what's to do: Work with HN Corp - and convince them that they
have a profitable opportunity building TP systems that support better
DB-based business models - where the DB is Rdb/VMS.
Anyone who can get a VAX into an IBM-based shop at half the price of
Big Blue should be thanked for every opportunity that they make
available to us today. Because tomorrow - the client will be seeing
things our way with half of our sales effort.
If we build something that is pure Digital which is too expensive, too
slow, and too inefficient, then we have failed to serve the client, and
we will alienate a 3rd-party vendor. Worse - we have lost the money
used to support the pre-sales effort while also taking a chance at being
shut out of the account for a very long time.
If we partner the vendor, we off-load some of the risk, we loose some
of the profit, but we also gain a technology leg without having spent
any money on engineering the solution with half the pre-sales effort.
TP sales are notoriously long-term and take forever to land. Use the
3rd-party vendor to shorten the landing time - and then sell the vendor
and the client on our technology in bits and pieces until the only
thing either sees is Digital - pure and simple. [I have a feeling that
HN Corp wants to use some of our technology in future offerings - if
they only could keep their cash flow going and had a Digital ear to
tell their needs to.]
If you do it right - you will have opened doors that were closed to us
whenever we tried to offer pure Digital TP solutions. You will have
made it possible for the corporation to see profit faster and made it
possible to deliver future products and services to the client under
your account team - while the client foots the bill. If you do it
right, you will be able to do it again, and again: Success is repeatable
business.
Be careful out there - but remember - the 3rd-party vendor is also a
potential client - and is an agent for his own clients. Bring the
3rd-party vendor in line - and you will win his clients too.
Hope this advice helps ... /bob lee/
|
967.13 | clarification | NCBOOT::LITASI | to the land of Gitchi-Goommie.... | Wed Sep 11 1991 01:27 | 28 |
|
re .12:
1. Thanks Bob for mailing me a copy of your reply; it would have
been a while before I got back to these notes.
2. I reread all the replies, and I'm not sure that I my note
sounded "upset with his marketing message". I was just stating
the coincidental nature of his reference to a client: the *same*
client that Miles described.
3. Since you are the person who is talking to Bob Nelson
it seemed a good idea to let you know the potential conflict
that could arise. If you like, we can talk by phone and I
can fill you in on the history (dtn 442-2026).
4. I appreciate your concerns about working with 3rd parties.
I hadn't really thought about Bob as a potential customer, but
then I have lots of other things on my mind... like understanding
the customer's business. It *has* changed alot since the days
when Cytrol was the 3rd party who wrote the system. The Client's
IS mgr originally came from Cytrol, so the relationship has been going
on a long time. ...long before I dropped in to deliver services...
5. Perhaps you should move the information about 3rd parties
to another note and start up another discussion.
Sherry Litasi
|