July 2002
IBM vies for 3000
customers
Customers consider reasons to adopt iSeries
IBM is starting to turn its focus toward a customer base
which closely resembles a loyal group of its own users, offering HP
3000 customers reasons and incentives to replace their systems with
Big Blues iSeries servers. IBM will have to dispel doubts about
the future of a proprietary computing platform the same kind
of assurances HP has been delivering to 3000 customers for years, at
least until last November.
The head of HPs 3000 business, Dave Wilde, said the
AS/400 and iSeries may be the right fit for some customers who
cant migrate specialized applications. But he believes there
are risks in joining another community which swims against what HP
views as the tide of commodity computing.
As those customers want to deploy new technologies,
theyll have integration challenges if they adopt an AS/400
now, Wilde said. Moving into an environment that is not
growing for the long term and sustainable I dont believe
that most people will want to switch to that sort of environment
knowing what the future holds.
But HP 3000 software vendors can get into an iSeries for a
low investment, following the lure of 500,000 customers. Developers
and consultants can lease an iSeries for 1.75 percent of the
systems price per month, putting the cost of a system at about
$6,000 a year.
IBM is also building converts and relationships among the
3000 consultant community. Partners looking to supplement their
steady-but-not-growing 3000 revenues are investigating the iSeries
opportunity.
They blew our socks off, said one 3000 expert
about a May presentation at IBMs iSeries headquarters.
This isnt your fathers IBM. Late in 1990s IBM
transformed the AS/400 to the iSeries, consolidating on the same
hardware design for IBMs Unix-, NT-, Linux- and OS/400-driven
servers.
Customer considerations
IBM last mounted a broad push to lure HP 3000 customers
during 1997, but found few converts among a customer base famous for
its devotion to MPE. This year, now that HP has advised its 3000
customers to look elsewhere for computing in the future, some sites
are considering the iSeries.
Despite their loyalty, customers who have run businesses
with home-grown applications see potential in moving to off-the-shelf
software. Its an area where the iSeries holds a massive numbers
advantage over the HP 3000. IBM officials and consultants in the
iSeries market say the platform has more than 20,000 programs written
for it.
Lane Rollins, IT manager for Portland-based Boyd Coffee
Co. and a long-time HP 3000 user, said those applications would let
him consider shifting to the iSeries.
If you asked me a few months ago if I would go the
iSeries route, I probably would have said no, he said, adding
that now, You really need to take a look at the solutions
available. The platform really should be a secondary
consideration.
Rollins said the transition that HP prompted with its
November 3000 announcement and migration advice is really an
opportunity for us to fix some of the bad decisions that were made 20
years ago so that we can take advantage of off-the-shelf
software. In this day in age, why do you need to have a home-grown AR
or order entry application?
Computing at Boyds is handled by HP 3000s that cover
manufacturing, distribution and manage a route sales system. Rollins
said We wont be able to throw out all of the code we
have, but we should be able to use more packaged software than we
are.
The HP 3000 was his preferred choice for the company, but
OpenMPE futures discussed to date dont hold any attraction for
Boyd. The manager would rather move to another platform where
technical advances are still an option.
At
this springs Solutions Symposium, Boyd said hed heard
OpenMPE organizers say they basically would put MPE in
maintenance mode and not do any development. I lost interest. The
market is getting more competitive every day. As a company we
cant afford to have our computing platform hold us
back.
Performance interaction
David Bruce, IBMs Worldwide iSeries Product Segment
Manager, confirmed that adding a powerful, interactive configuration
for the many models of the iSeries increases their cost of
acquisition. IBM calls the measure of performance for the iSeries
Commercial Processing Workload (CPW). While two iSeries models
recently enjoyed discounts through IBMs Green Streak program ,
for many systems, buying what customers call green screen
performance adds thousands to a systems cost.
IBM officials point to a growing number of applications
for the iSeries that dont use interactive pricing. But the
reality is that the fastest apps still require this serious boost in
the list price. Al Barsa, a long-time consultant in the AS/400 and
iSeries community, said interactive processing is prevalent among
AS/400 and iSeries shops. He added that IBM would rather overlook the
fact that green-screen applications make up the bulk of the iSeries
community.
In real life users would use a green-screen
interface, which is not what IBM wants you to know about, Barsa
said. IBM charges a huge premium for green-screen
performance.
IBM said some newer applications built for client-server
or Web client interfaces dont need these CPW cards, called 5250
transaction monitors. Bruce believes more than half of the available
iSeries applications dont need the CPW monitors but he
said the architecture around 5250 drives the iSeries more efficiently
than lower-cost alternatives.
In the world of performance, 5250 is a far more
elegant and streamlined performer than some more modern
workloads, Bruce said. iSeries apps from companies such as SAP,
Baan, and Lawson do not require this extra hardware expense.
Wading through sales effort
But interactive costs can be offset by the included DB2
database. Databases can easily cost thousands to acquire in Unix and
NT environments. Including a database in the iSeries is prompting
interest from Patrick McMahon, a 3000 system manager at Summit Racing
Systems. I am considering the iSeries now that IBM is making
DB2 available on it, he said. Providing a complete solution
makes his transition away from the HP 3000 less costly, he added.
I have a business to run, and it is not migrating
computer systems, McMahon said. Any time or money I spend
on migration is time and money that could be spent to further the
business systems.
While IBM woos such customers, these managers are aware
they are being courted while feeling discarded by HP. We feel
that we have just been jilted, McMahon said. He added that the
interest shown in the 3000 customer has to be qualified.
Ive been in the computer business for 37 years, and I
must tell you its the sale that they are after, not
you.
Some consultants and resellers are advising 3000 sites on
the move to steer away from any solution rooted in a single
vendors price list.
I want to minimize the risk of having another
11-14-01, said Mark Wonsil of 4M Enterprises. I will not
recommend to any of my clients an architecture that locks them into a
single vendor or solution. Full migrations are expensive and don't
add value to any business. That goes for HP, Compaq, and Oracle as
well as IBM.
But HP 3000 loyalists, offered a bundled solution with
several thousand software suppliers, are taking first steps to
explore the iSeries. I am looking on eBay for an inexpensive
AS/400 that would let use get our feet wet with what IBM has to
offer, and see how different that is from the HP 3000, said Jim
Phillips of Therm-O-Link. Like others who are avoiding closer contact
with Unix and NT, hed prefer to believe in the potential of
MPEs future under OpenMPE, but is frustrated with a lack of
news from the homesteading organization. The iSeries seems to offer
him less complexity than Unix, and more stability than NT.
I am not interested in moving to Unix of whatever
flavor, and I cant see Windows being robust enough to handle
our processing requirements, Phillips said. I'd rather
stay with MPE.
At
Lady Remington Fashion Jewelry, the HP 3000s working today are being
measured against the potential of the iSeries. Al Karman just arrived
in the shop, bringing his HP 3000 experience to a site considering a
transition toward an platform which appears to have more software and
human resource.
Were starting the discussions, but
theres strong direction towards the AS/400, said Karman.
It plays open systems nicely, is supposedly not a bear to
administer, has mucho software and an ever-growing talent
pool.
Even the most ardent HP 3000 advocates see the addition of
another option as more leverage, at the least, when dealing with
HP.
I am adding the iSeries with OS/400 to my list of
possible alternatives, with its ability to run AIX and Linux in other
partitions, said CIO John Wolff of LAACO, Ltd., which owns and
operates self-storage businesses and private clubs in the western US.
I keep slapping myself, thinking this is all just a nightmare
and it will all be okay when I wake up. But, alas, it is truly
happening.
I have plenty of time to evaluate my next choice
but the point is I have several choices other than
HP.
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