ENTER































AS/400 seattle Washington  IT consulting iseries 400 software
RPG programming

Offers AS/400 seattle Washington  IT consulting, iseries 400 software, RPG programming, ibm business partner Oregon, and distribution. Manage, Inc. was chosen as one of Puget Sound Business Journal's 100 Fastest-Growing Private Companies in Washington State. Manage, Inc. was ranked #27 in the list for the second year in a row. Manage, Inc. was selected based on the company's level of revenue growth over the last three years. Puget Sound Business Journal and Grant Thornton accounting firm conducted the research and verified each company's revenues.

If your browser does not support frames please click here

 

 

AS/400 Seattle Washington  IT consulting iseries 400 software ibm business partner Oregon

 

AS/400 seattle Washington  IT consulting
iseries 400 software
RPG programming
ibm business partner Oregon
distribution software

 

ibm business partner Oregon distribution software


Offers AS/400 seattle Washington  IT consulting, iseries 400 software, RPG programming, ibm business partner Oregon, and distribution. Dr. Frank Soltis, the IBM engineer who has been called "the AS/400's Elvis," recently shared a success story during a keynote speech at a user conference in Florida. This particular company was in the software distribution business and at one point had 23 AS/400s located around the world. The company was a very good customer, went from CISC to RISC, and was always one of the first to upgrade to new technology, he said. Then came the Year 2000 problem, and despite five years of dedicated service during a period of great revenue growth, the company decided that it was time to move off the 400. So in June of 1999, the company unplugged its AS's and powered up the 1,200 NT servers it needed to replace them. But things didn't quite go as planned. "They found they couldn't make it work," Soltis told the crowd. "Today, one year after unplugging their 40s, they're back on the 00." That company is Microsoft. "They viewed that as a point of embarrassment," Soltis said. "We thought it was kind of funny....Can you think of a company with greater incentive to move to NT, and they.


search engine optimization and placement