High ROI and 100% Success Rate

MetaWare has helped more than 150 of the world's largest companies to realize the benefits of mainframe modernization, winning awards and industry recognition for Return-on-Investment (ROI), 100% Success Rate, and technology leadership.

 

The wholesale division of Alliance Boots has eliminated obsolescence risks, completely documented distribution processes, while simplifying and accelerating the integration of its new ERP system with legacy applications.

The French Social Security Agency has slashed $65 million annual spending on hardware and software maintenance for to just $10 million by migrating 12,000 MIPS from the mainframe to Unix servers.

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Automated, factory based 1:1 functionnality mainframe application migration enabled the #1 German health insurer to reduce costs and increase flexibility, while maintaining existing skill-sets and knowledge base.

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Commercial packages often do not support business specific processes. If your applications rely on IBM IMS, the recurring costs are high and experts in short supply. Eurocopter has selected the more cost-effective and less risky solution, meeting architecture, deadline, and budget requirements.

The Swedish Social Insurance Agency retained its legacy mainframe applications – 9,000 programs - and runs them on a less costly Unix platform. The multi-tiered system delivers significant benefits in terms of OPEX, quality of service, openness and agility.

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Refine Natural:Cobol brings a new breath of life to Natural applications, eliminates expensive Software AG license fees, helps rationalizing development technology and delivery processes, while improving performance by 20%.

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SLAs have always been the cornerstone of corporate customer contracts. Moving the incumbent network services applications off the mainframe mitigated the risk of downtime. It also enabled more interoperability, increased flexibility and maintenance productivity.

Like many large mainframe shops, some business-critical processes were developed on the mainframe since the 1980s using a proprietary language. Faced with the imminent retirement of their last two specialists, the only solution was automated translation to a more viable and popular programming language.   

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