Tag: Mainframe

  • The Mason and The Mainframe

    The Mason and The Mainframe

    What do the IBM Z Mainframe and Ancient Freemasonry have in common? They are both obsessed with one thing: Endurance.

    In this episode of The Cab Call, we attempt a seemingly absurd comparison between the digital world and the social world. We pit the “Mainframe Advocate” against the “Masonry Advocate” to debate the concept of State Preservation.

    One runs on silicon, electricity, and error-correcting code. The other runs on ritual, memory, and oral tradition. Both are trying to achieve the exact same goal: keeping a specific set of data intact while the world around them changes.

    The Challenge: Which is harder? Preserving a banking ledger with zero corruption for 60 years, or preserving a spoken ritual word-for-word for six centuries?

    Transmission: How Mainframe modernization (CDC, Refactoring) compares to Masonic “Word Pairs” and the “Attentive Ear.”

    Resilience: Disaster recovery (GDPS, Metro Mirror) vs. the distributed network of human memory.

    The Crisis: How both systems face an identical existential threat—the skills gap and the need for apprenticeship.

    Join us as we decide whether it’s harder to preserve a binary digit or a moral truth.

    Sources

  • The Temple and the Error Budget

    The Temple and the Error Budget

    What happens when you put Solomon’s Temple next to a modern error budget and ask them both what “perfection” really means? In this episode, we explore the idea that reliable service is not just a technical outcome but a moral consequence — the visible result of character, duty, and brotherly love expressed through IT work.

    Drawing on Freemasonry, Stoic philosophy, and the writings of Marcus Aurelius, we unpack what it means to work logarithmically toward an ideal you will never fully reach. We contrast the Masonic Temple and its working tools with SRE and ITIL principles: why 100% uptime is the wrong target, how continual improvement mirrors lifelong moral refinement, and how duty becomes the backbone of both spiritual life and professional reliability.

    Then we zoom in on the real builders of today’s “Temple”: the backup and recovery specialist guarding the sacred data; the infrastructure engineer hewing and setting the foundation; the Citrix/WebSphere/DB2 specialist adorning the inward workings; the mainframe programmer quietly automating away chaos; and the mainframe operator keeping vigil in the sanctum of production. By the end, your ticket queue, your runbooks, and your change windows look less like random toil and more like stonework on a shared, enduring structure.

    Source #1: ITILv4 Foundation

    Source #2: The Meditations by Marcus Aurellius