Technical Papers

A technical "white paper", technology survey, research study, etc.

Cross-Compiling Linux/390

This paper will explain how to build and use a cross-compilation environment for the zSeries or S/390 Linux kernel on a non-mainframe host.

Web Coding in Romulan? Open Source at the Worldcon

Scott Courtney attended Chicon, the 2000 World Science Fiction Convention, and published the following article (September 2000) Linux Planet(September 2000),

S/390: The Linux Dream Machine

Scott Courtney looks at the modern mainframe using Linux in an article for Linux Planet (February 2000).

Linux Scalability Testing: Part II - Economics and the Linux Solution

An article by Adam Thornton originally published in Technical Support (December 2000) discusses Linux for System/390 for designing and deploying large-scale Internet service provider (ISP) and Internet data center (IDC) infrastructure solutions.

Published Articles Written by SNA Staff; 2000

This section provides links to articles written by employees of Sine Nomine Associates, but published by other organizations (e.g., technical journals) in calendar year 2000.

Published Articles by SNA Staff

This section provides links to articles written by employees of Sine Nomine Associates, but published by other organizations (e.g., technical journals).

IT White Papers 2007

Members of the Sine Nomine Associates team spend a great deal of time researching current problems and trends in the IT industry, in both business and technical contexts. We are pleased to present the following white papers, based on our research, which were published during calendar year 2007.

IT White Papers

This section contains original articles written by SNA staff members and published by Sine Nomine Associates.

Publications

Sine Nomine Associates' staff members are active participants in the technical community. We are pleased to provide these publications for the benefit of our customers.

HP BladeSystem Cooling White Paper

Hewlett-Packard Corporation has introduced a line of blade server products with a radically redesigned power and cooling system. According to HP advertising, the “HP Thermal Logic”power and cooling system represents a new approach that significantly reduces the power consumption and required airflow for data centers requiring fully-featured, high-density servers.
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