COBOL programmers back in the game

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March 19, 2001, 03:36 PM —  ITworld.com — 

You're wrong if you think COBOL programmers are doomed to go the way of the Edsel. Despite predictions to the contrary, the world kept revolving around its axis after Y2K. Yet, the job market for COBOL programmers suddenly plunged -- and so did their salaries. However, this decline has since been stemmed thanks to the Internet's transition into a sprawling shopping mall selling everything from toothbrushes to tractors.

In the late 1990s, organizations fired up Y2K remediation projects and sought COBOL programmers to immunize legacy (database management systems running on mainframes or minicomputers) business applications against Y2K-related problems. Today, companies are finding that they need help integrating these legacy systems with new applications.

A couple of years ago Bill Lockhart, 63, a veteran COBOL programmer from Los Altos, Calif., was hard pressed to find a company that would take advantage of his more than 30 years of experience. His experience as a COBOL programmer dates to 1966 when he worked as a systems programmer. More recently, as a database specialist, he worked on several assignments for IBM writing in COBOL, PL/I, REXX, and assembly language.

"The tables have turned," chuckles Lockhart. "IT industries need my COBOL skills to get going on the Web."

Most of the world's business data, approximately 75 to 85 percent, is written in COBOL," adds Bill Payson, president and CEO of Senior Techs, an Internet-based job bank for experienced IT professionals in Campbell, Calif. "That translates to some hundreds of billions of lines of code."

COBOL is used in some manner by almost all Fortune 500 companies. Many of these companies have a large pool of COBOL-based applications that are primary business systems. E-business requires these systems to be integrated and connected to the outside world.

"With the future of all commerce linked to the Internet, companies with massive databases know that success depends on the ability to move data in and out of the Internet," Payson explains.

Paul Halpern, director of traditional development solutions at Merant, a Web-enabling training company in Mountain View, Calif., maintains that, "If all the COBOL programs stopped working, the US economy would collapse." And he points out: "Nine out of ten of the top Internet brokers use COBOL with CICS [Customer Information Control Systems]. Chances are that when you use an ATM card you are starting a COBOL/CICS process. An IBM report published last year indicates 30 billion COBOL/CICS transactions are executed worldwide each day, more than the total number of Web pages hit each day."

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Comments

of course now all the cobol

of course now all the cobol jobs have been outsourced to india.
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used MF COBOL 10 years back

I am 51 years old. Last used MF COBOL 10 years back. Is there any scope for me to take up the COBOL Job again? Location Pune-India
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Main Frame vs Windows Apps.

The current group of experienced COBOL programmers have good work ethics built-in. But the "kids' showed up, when they wanted to, for meetings. Lateness is disrespect to the manager and the rest of us who made time for the meeting.

I seen a lot of short cuts taken in web page design and coding. We tested our COBOL code and what if conditions were supplied.

The young managers are afraid we will work for a while and then quit. At this point, seasoned workers have settled into a company and are staying! Recognition is desired not always money.
I ,for one, would like to get back on the coding chair and start drinking coffee and debugging code. Acceptance testing is now the last step before documentation. And it suffers a lot because managers don't know how to schedule projects! A manager brings the projects planning skills and programmers do the coding and testing.
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