IBM yesterday announced new offerings for System z that will provide clients with a platform for the rapid development and deployment of mobile applications, and the complete integration of these with their core business processes, applications and data. The announcement came as IBM celebrates 50 years since its first mainframe launch.

As part of the announcement, IBM is also unveiling a new flexible pricing model for mobile mainframe clients that will allow them to pay only for the computing capacity they need and use.

With three times the number of mobile phones in the world as computers, it is essential that businesses have an IT infrastructure that can enhance their ability to deliver new mobile and cloud services.

Combined with trends showing that by 2015, there will be 20 times more content, 15 times more applications and four times the number of mobile transactions as there were in 2011, it is clear why many organisations are turning to the mainframe to manage their enterprises.

The growth in the number of mobile transactions is challenging businesses that are seeing a concurrent rise in their costs related to integrating new mobile applications. The IBM System z Solution for Mobile Computing can help these businesses to rapidly integrate and deliver new mobile and cloud services leading to a better experience for their customers.

The latest news expands this offering by announcing new pricing for mobile workloads on z/OS which can improve the cost of growth for mobile transaction volumes that can cause a spike in software charges. This new pricing will provide up to a 60% reduction on the processor capacity reported for Mobile transactions, which can help normalize the rate of transaction growth used for software charges.

In Africa, most of the population has a cell phone – First National Bank (FNB) was looking for an opportunity to transform an entire continent through its most popular channel: the mobile device. Creating a series of mobile banking tools, FNB increased its transactions to more than 230-million a month. With their increasingly popular new banking tools, FNB needed infrastructure that could support the swell of transactions and new users.

FNB looked to IBM System z to handle the load and provide insights on its services, improve its business and provide a better overall customer experience.

“Mobile transactions have grown at an exponential rate as we expand our range of services, client experience and reach, far outpacing growth in traditional transactions” says Jay Prag, CIO: Hogan Channel Integration, FNB “The mainframe environment allows us to dynamically scale and grow in a cost efficient manner.”

Throughout the past five decades, the mainframe has evolved, with a steady stream of technical innovations that have helped businesses to continuously adapt to changing market demands.

In addition to the mobile solutions, today’s announcement continues this evolution with a series of offerings to help clients gain even more insight into their data, including:
* zDoop software – working with IBM, Veristorm is providing the industry’s first commercial Hadoop for Linux on System z. This will help clients to avoid staging and offloading of mainframe data to maintain existing security and governance controls;
* Flash for mainframe – the next generation of flash storage on IBM DS8870 can provide faster time to insight with up to 30X the performance over HDD;
* Continuous Integration for System z – compresses the application delivery cycle from months to weeks or days;
* New version of IBM CICS Transaction Server – delivers enhanced mobile and cloud support for CICS, trusted by businesses running more than 1-billion transactions per day;
* IBM WebSphere Liberty z/OS Connect – rapid and secure enablement of web, cloud and mobile access to z/OS assets; and
* IBM Security zSecure SSE – helps prevent malicious computer attacks with enhanced security intelligence and compliance reporting. zSecure can direct security events to QRadar SIEM to provide integrated enterprise wide security intelligence dashboard reporting.

The IBM Academic Initiative helps to provide schools with the education resources they need to introduce and develop enterprise-computing skills to students to help them gain exposure to job opportunities and careers. The program helps to facilitate student learning in high demand IT skills and links employers to available students and professional talent.

For more than seven years, IBM has worked with students, professors, businesses and universities to provide mainframe training and curriculum resources to more than 180 000 students at over 1 000 schools in 70 countries.

As part of this continuing commitment to the growth and development of the mainframe ecosystem, IBM is also announcing three new online educational offerings.