- Industry: Computer
- Number of terms: 98482
- Number of blossaries: 0
- Company Profile:
Sometimes referred to as “Big Blue” IBM is a multinational corporation headquartered in Armonk, New York. It manufactures computer hardware and software and provides information technology and services.
An IBM application programming interface (API) used by requester and server programs to communicate with the personal computer or host routers.
Industry:Software
An IBM architecture for high-speed networking that complements the asynchronous transfer mode (ATM) standards and provides access services, transport services, and network control for user traffic.
Industry:Software
An IBM architecture for mainframe computers and peripherals. Processor systems that follow the ESA/390 architecture include the ES/9000 family. See also z/Architecture.
Industry:Software
An IBM architecture for mainframe computers and peripherals. The zSeries family of servers uses the z/Architecture. It is the successor to the S/390 and 9672 family of servers. See also Enterprise Systems Architecture/390.
Industry:Software
An IBM architecture that defines a framework for implementing systems for the analysis of unstructured data.
Industry:Software
An IBM architecture that defines a set of identifiers, resources, services, and conventions to achieve consistent representation, processing, and interchange of graphic character data in heterogeneous environments.
Industry:Software
An IBM architecture that defines a single approach to error detection through defensive programming techniques. These techniques provide proactive (passive until required) problem recognition and a description of diagnostic output required to debug a software problem.
Industry:Software
A user-provided part of a FEPI application that handles STSN requests.
Industry:Software
A user-written program that is implemented entirely by using a subset of SQL statements and SQL PL statements and that is invoked by using the SQL CALL statement. See also SQL routine, routine, procedure.
Industry:Software
A user-written program that monitors or modifies the function of an MQI call. For each MQI call issued by an application, the API exit is invoked before the queue manager starts to process the call and again after the queue manager has completed processing the call. The API exit can inspect and modify any of the parameters on the MQI call.
Industry:Software