Lox wrote:Bah...Y2K was made out to be a bigger deal then it actually was. I think it's a good idea for some selected mainframe apps be converted, but to migrate all of them is a waste of time and money. And honestly, the mainframe stuff is probably 50 times more stable than the new code being written today.
No, Y2K was a big deal. We just happened to be prepared for it. If we pretended it didn't exist, then we would be in a cats/dogs living together scenario.
Tessian wrote:Why pay 6 programmers $60k/year to rewrite all my applications which will be a long, painful process that could cause much downtime and no gain when instead I can just pay 1 programmer $80k/year to maintain it all?
Probably more than that for the COBOL guy. Also, let's say it took a year to rewrite those applications. (Nevermind that you could probably just buy the software outright.) It would cost you $360K. In five years, you would have been paying $400K for that one COBOL guy.
Not to mention, the risk of the hardware breaking and the fear that the part doesn't even exist any more. Or the efficiencies gained by using a modern program. A 30-year-old piece of software means a piece of software that hasn't been improved in 30 years.