Micro Focus looks to revive Cobol skills

 

Plans to support Indian university courses.

British software company Micro Focus plans to partner with Indian universities to supplement a "shrinking pool" of Cobol programmers in Australia and the world.

According to the company's ANZ general manager Bruce Craig, Cobol was typically neglected by young developers despite being scalable, efficient, reliable, and "very easy to write in".

Cobol - an acronym for the COmmon Business-Oriented Language - was established in 1959 and now underpins a majority of mainframe business, finance, and administrative systems.

Micro Focus estimated 90 percent of today's financial transactions to be processed in Cobol, which was used in many core banking systems that handled deposit accounts, loans and payments.

"There are more Cobol transactions than there are Google searches," Craig told iTnews last week.

"[But] kids today at universities see C+, Java ... it's all about the intuitive GUI [graphical user interface]. Cobol is seen as a retrograde step."

Micro Focus has developed Cobol products since 1976 and now focuses on "modernising" and migrating applications from mainframe systems to other platforms.

Its customers include the Insurance Australia Group (IAG), retailer Tesco, health insurer Bupa, and a "large regional bank in Singapore" that could not be named.

According to David Taylor, Micro Focus president in Asia Pacific and Japan, companies were unlikely to abandon Cobol-based systems to avoid risk and cost.

"Throwing away a core banking system to build something new is a three to four year exercise," he said.

"Throwing it away for a packaged application that then has to be customised is a four to five year exercise.

"You've got to have a bank account. If it works, why change it?"

Taylor likened the popularity of programming languages to fashion, but "couldn't imagine" a future in which Cobol was obsolete.

He revealed Micro Focus' plans to support Cobol courses at Indian universities by providing training and licensing options for its development tools.

The company had no plans to promote such courses in Australia, he said, noting that work could be outsourced if necessary.

Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.


Micro Focus looks to revive Cobol skills
""He revealed Micro Focus' plans to support Cobol courses at Indian universities by providing training and licensing options for its development tools." Hmm, wouldn't have anything to do with the ..."
By realitybites
 
 
 
Comments: 4
Notomys
Nov 23, 2010 8:45 AM
I knew this day would come. I've been advocating for years to Java/.NET developers that the future is COBOL, and been laughed at.
Mabelode
Nov 23, 2010 9:30 AM
Hear Hear, bring back Assembler and Fortran as well.
Ace
Nov 23, 2010 9:38 AM
It kind of fails to mention that 100% of transactions are created, analysed, transmitted, stored, warehoused etc etc by every language except COBOL. We all know that banks have a few core banking system running proprietary OSs and COBOL, but transactions have typically been touched by many other systems before they go there to rest in peace.
realitybites
Nov 23, 2010 10:39 AM
"He revealed Micro Focus' plans to support Cobol courses at Indian universities by providing training and licensing options for its development tools."

Hmm, wouldn't have anything to do with the cost of cheap labour would it?

"The company had no plans to promote such courses in Australia, he said, noting that work could be outsourced if necessary."

Let me guess, outsourced to India perhaps? I think I can see where Micro Focus is going here.
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