|

|
|
|
 |
 |
|
Partners:
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
EnterpriseSCHEDULE and EnterpriseBACKUP help IKEA furnish your home
|
|
IKEA International
is one of the world's top furniture retailers with operations in 30 countries and 160 giant stores worldwide. The IKEA business idea is to
offer a wide range of home furnishings with good design and function at prices
so low that as many people as possible will be able to afford them - and still have money left!
Most popular for its Scandinavian-style home furnishings and other housewares, this Swedish
company designs and manufactures its own furniture. Since 1994, ISE's EnterpriseSCHEDULE and
EnterpriseBACKUP has been a key factor in the central data processing operations at IKEA North America. More...
|
|
|
|
Upcoming ISE Shows
|
|
September is a busy month for ISE as we are
exhibiting and presenting our solutions at two conferences. The HP Technology Exchange will be held in Houston, TX from Sunday, September
17 through Wednesday, September 20. The conference will take place in the George Brown
Convention Center and ISE will be at booth 310, where both EnterpriseSCHEDULE and
EnterpriseBACKUP will be available for demonstration and discussion.
USERS' Incorporated 23rd Annual Educational Conference (EdCon '06) will be
held in Orlando, FL from Sunday, September 17 through Thursday, September 21 at the Hyatt Regency Grand Cypress. ISE will be at booth 4 and will be
assisting our partner, USERS Incorporated, in the marketing and presentation of EnterpriseSCHEDULE.
|
|
|
|
EnterpriseSCHEDULE A job that does not have any DCL commands
associated with it is processed through the system in a slightly different fashion from one that does. Such a job is never entered into an
execution batch queue. These jobs are marked as having successfully completed whenever execution is requested.
This type of job is very useful when a more complex scheduling mode is needed than what is provided by a single job. For example, two data files are
required before a job can execute. A single job can only wait for a single file. In this case two jobs are defined each one waiting for one file.
The first job initiates the second job. The first job has no DCL commands associated with it. All the job commands are part of the second job. The
first job will never be entered into a execution batch queue. It will, however, proceed through the various scheduling queues in a normal fashion.
Once both files have been found, the second job will be entered into an execution.
|
|
|
|
EnterpriseBACKUP
Privilege controls access to commands and the use of
qualifiers by the user. There are three levels of privilege recognized by MEDIA, VAULT and BCKMGR:
- General user: The most basic level of privilege, this allows a user to access all media allocated to himself. He can also access
another user's media to the degree that the user has set the UIC protection string.
- MEDIA Operator: MEDIA OPERATOR privilege is granted to any user who has either the OPER or media operator authorization. These
privileges are granted using the VMS AUTHORIZE command. It allows the user to have read access to all on-line information. He also has full
access to any media allocated to himself.
- MEDIA Manager: The highest level of privilege, MEDIA MANAGER is assigned to the user who has the SYSPRV, BYPASS, SYSTEM_UIC or
media manager authorization. These privileges are granted using the VMS AUTHORIZE command. The MEDIA MANAGER can access all media and perform
any function on it.
|
|
|
|
SCHEDULE Tool Tip
Are there job wizards or short cuts to building jobs?
Yes, EnterpriseSCHEDULE has a job wizard. More importantly, there are job prototype templates to help you build your comely run tasks with just a
click of your mouse. ISE provides templates for ftp, sql, Schedule reports, and other commonly done tasks. ISE supplies application temples for
Banner, GE-IDX, and other applications. Call ISE today to develop your own custom prototype job templates for your computing facility.
More...
|
|
|
|
© Copyright 2006 ISE Inc. All rights reserved. Legal & Privacy Notices.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|