@2rom
Company 1 should be turned into a kind of mutual trust company. That technology is now too important to the economy (and even society) of much of the world. It is simply too important to be left in the hands of people like Arvind and Rob Thomas.
The goals of the company (which will be run by major customers and financial regulators) will include:
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ensuring continued support for all of the products mentioned for as long as necessary;
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a very clear and focused mission to expedite every customer moving work off of the platform;
It should be clear that there will be fewer revs of the z architecture going forward and those will only contain features that either there is general agreement that customers want or simply keep up with current chip technology.
The (new) company should develop technology to move away from ancient artifacts such as EBCDIC. It should also work towards finding elements of existing work loads that can be offloaded to more current platforms. This may necessitate translating existing cobol to better languages. (I suggest that AI might not be the answer here. Arvind and Rob are convinced that it can do something but no one has seen any good results.)
The flip side is that there should be extremely limited new development of z/OS or IMS or any of those other products. The main focus of the (new) company must be to encourage moving work off an unwieldy platform and onto a modern platform. Anything that acts as an enabler for customers staying on the platform is unhelpful.
This really needs to be done for the good of all of us who have an interest in a functional economic system. The history is not really important but where we are is: a dysfunctional company run by fools owns a lot of technology that is critical to the way of life of a lot of us. This technology really doesn't have an awesome future anyway. It's mostly pretty terrible. So a concerted effort should be made to retire it as much as possible.
I am not normally given to socialized corporate ownership or government participation in corporate ownership. But it is abundantly clear that the company that owns this key technology has utterly lost its way and cannot be trusted.