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wats the difference between mainframe n server!!. is it a server.

2006-08-21 05:19:59 · 13 answers · asked by sethu 1 in Computers & Internet Computer Networking

13 answers

the frame w/ the biggest photo in it. hahahahah......... :)

2006-08-21 09:06:33 · answer #1 · answered by Kitten2 6 · 1 0

A mainframe is technically a server, in that it serves data, but in a very large scale used by companies with many many connections to one device. Most companies will have many servers doing various tasks.

But a company that uses a mainframe generally has the need to have hundreds if not thousands of users requiring access to a single point. In many cases mainframes are used with dummy termianls for the clients - where basically the client computer is just a screen with a keyboard and mouse, and everything is actually done at the mainframe.

2006-08-21 05:28:07 · answer #2 · answered by WhoMe 4 · 0 0

Mainframe is an older term used to describe the older, larger computers they keep locked in an air-conditioned specially-prepared room. It think the term came about when PCs first hit the scene to distinguish between PCs and the older larger computers.

No, a server is a smaller intermediate sized box - smaller than the mainframe, but more powerful than the PC.

2006-08-21 05:27:36 · answer #3 · answered by snvffy 7 · 0 0

A mainframe can act as a server but a mainframe is typically a large stand along computer used by businesses for batch processing of huge volumes of data. It can handle online access as well but historically they have been stand along type machines. And on a huge scale. Much faster and much more powerful than most normal servers.

2006-08-21 05:27:18 · answer #4 · answered by John 6 · 0 0

U could consider a mainframe a very expensive server.
And in fact some companies use their mainframe as exactly that.

One place I know has their old mainframe actually handling dozens of servers as a server manager?

2006-08-21 06:19:04 · answer #5 · answered by pcreamer2000 5 · 0 0

Mainframe computers do calculations or process data and servers do just that serve applications to users and provide storage.

2006-08-21 05:26:19 · answer #6 · answered by ? 6 · 0 0

A mainframe Computer.... is a large computer that does mostly in house applications for the company.... a server usually is a PC size that runs and controls other PC's that are connected to it on a network...

You see..........."O" Wise One.......... knows about these things...

2006-08-21 05:29:03 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A main frame is very powerfull computer that acts as a central storage and process center.

it is like that you have a monitor and a keyboard and just a CD-rom drive and a cable connecting you to the main frame you do not have any CPU's or mother board . the main frame is your central processing unit.

But servers are stand alone computers that will give services to the clients individualy.

2006-08-21 05:49:24 · answer #8 · answered by Shantia 2 · 0 0

A large powerful computer, often serving many connected terminals 100-400 and usually used by large complex organizations, occupying a special air-conditioned room.

2006-08-21 05:29:18 · answer #9 · answered by Flaca II 5 · 0 0

Yes, the same as a Windows server, Unix, AIX, AS400. The difference is the operating system on the physical hardware. While client/server systems are suited for rapid application deployment and distributed processing, mainframes are efficient at online transactional processing, mass storage, centralized software distribution, and data warehousing [Data 96]. Data warehousing is information (usually in summary form) extracted from an operational database by data mining (drilling down into the information through a series of related queries). The purpose of data warehousing and data mining is to provide executive decision makers with data analysis information (such as trends and correlated results) to make and improve business decisions.

Mainframe can be described in a three tier client/server architecture. The combination of mainframe horsepower as a server in a client/server distributed architecture results in a very effective and efficient system. Mainframe vendors are now providing standard communications and programming interfaces that make it easy to integrate mainframes as servers in a client/server architecture. Using mainframes as servers in a client/server distributed architecture provides a more modular system design, and provides the benefits of the client/server technology.

Using mainframes as servers in a client/server architecture also enables the distribution of workload between major data centers and provides disaster protection and recovery by backing up large volumes of data at disparate locations. The current model favors "thin" clients (contains primarily user interface services) with very powerful servers that do most of the extensive application and data processing, such as in a two tier architecture. In a three tier client/server architecture, process management (business rule execution) could be off-loaded to another server.


Usage Considerations
Mainframes are preferred for big batch jobs and storing massive amounts of vital data. They are mainly used in the banking industry, public utility systems, and for information services. Mainframes also have tools for monitoring performance of the entire system, including networks and applications not available today on UNIX servers [Siwolp 95].
New mainframes are providing parallel systems (unlike older bipolar machines) and use complementary metal-oxide semiconductor (CMOS) microprocessors, rather than emitter-coupler logic (ECL) processors. Because CMOS processors are packed more densely than ECL microprocessors, mainframes can be built much smaller and are not so power-hungry. They can also be cooled with air instead of water [Siwolp 95].

While it appeared in the early 1990s that mainframes were being replaced by client/server architectures, they are making a comeback. Some mainframe vendors have seen as much as a 66% jump in mainframe shipments in 1995 due to the new mainframe server software architecture [Siwolp 95].

Given the cost of a mainframe compared to other servers, UNIX workstations and personal computers (PCs), it is not likely that mainframes would replace all other servers in a distributed two or three tier client/server architecture.


Maturity
Mainframe technology has been well known for decades. The new improved models have been fielded since 1994. The new mainframe server software architecture provides the distributed client/server design with massive storage and improved security capability. New technologies of data warehousing and data mining data allow extraction of information from the operational mainframe server's massive storage to provide businesses with timely data to improve overall business effectiveness. For example, stores such as Wal-Mart found that by placing certain products in close proximity within the store, both products sold at higher rates than when not collocated.1

Costs and Limitations
By themselves, mainframes are not appropriate mechanisms to support graphical user interfaces. Nor can they easily accommodate increases in the number of user applications or rapidly changing user needs [Edelstein 94].

Alternatives
Using a client/server architecture without a mainframe server is a possible alternative. When requirements for high volume (greater than 50 gigabit), batch type processing, security, and mass storage are minimal, three tier or two tier architectures without a mainframe server may be viable alternatives. Other possible alternatives to using mainframes in a client/server distributed environment are using parallel processing software architecture or using a database machine.

Complementary Technologies
A complementary technology to mainframe server software architectures is open systems . This is because movement in the industry towards interoperable heterogeneous software programs and operating systems will continue to increase reuse of mainframe technology and provide potentially new applications for mainframe capabilities.

2006-08-21 05:28:57 · answer #10 · answered by Rod H 2 · 1 0

I even have alotta distinctive ringtones like: head stable- capture duffle bag boy- Playaz Circle Mockingbird- Eminem authentic Gangsta- SPM soreness- 3 Dayz Grace As u can see im into rock n rap!

2016-12-17 14:44:20 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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