Court ditches mainframe for Windows system
By
John Fontana
,
Network World
, 03/07/2005
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Debbie Brasher cut the mainframe cord and she is not looking back. The director of technology for the Superior Court Stanislaus
County System in Modesto, Calif., has moved on to a Windows-based infrastructure and a set of Web-based applications to host
the court's case management system, which is used to manage civil and criminal cases.
The new computing architecture already has drawn the attention of the California court system and one day might be the standard
throughout the state.
While Brasher isn't so brash with her predictions on the impact of her work, she knows that what she and her staff have built
is pulling them into the new millennium, and providing the means to update and expand what was a dying mainframe infrastructure.
"Once we got off the mainframe, we were able to spend more money to enhance what we already had," Brasher says. Money was
the root of the problem, she says.
"My last mainframe bill [before migrating] was $1.2 million, which was $300,000 more than the previous year," she says. The
money was paid to the county for licensing, programming and transaction time used on the county's mainframe. On top of that,
the mainframe was shared among agencies and supported 5,000 users. The county also controlled the programmers, which required
Brasher to negotiate for their time.
So Brasher bolted to Windows, replacing the court's connection to a token-ring network, bringing nearly 20 Windows 2000 servers
in-house and investing her cost savings to hire two programmers and an outside consultant to help convert the mainframe application
to Windows.
"I initially reduced my $1.2 million yearly mainframe cost by $500,000," Brasher says.
The savings also let her focus on adding six new applications to automate court procedures, and to consolidate the court's
workflow into one distributed computing environment that includes Windows XP clients and Cisco 6500, 3700 and 2600 routers.
Instead of struggling to maintain the case management system, which consisted of 785 separate COBOL programs, consulting firm
Enterprise Network Consultants used Fujitsu's NetCOBOL for .Net tools to convert the IBM CICS application to run on Windows.
The firm also built a Web-based interface to mimic the mainframe application, replacing the mainframe emulation previously
used on PCs and reducing end-user training costs.
Then Brasher's new programmers began creating the fresh Windows applications, set to roll out this month, that will bring
previously paper-based procedures online. Those procedures, which include collecting fines and distributing information to
law enforcement, will share data with the case management system.
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