That statement was almost true until around 2007-2009 were the processor industry switched from an exponential cpu speed function to a linear or logarithmic one...
Definitions
n : floored integer
s : cpu speed
l : float between 0[ and ]1
p : float between [1 2[
s(n) : speed at month n
The function for Moore's law
s(0) : some number
s(n) : s(n/18)*2
A linear speed function
s(0) : some number
s(n) : l*(n-1)
A logarithmic speed function
s(0) : some number
s(n) : p*(n-1)
That shift is significant, now I.A. researchers must also consider speed and parallelism, they cannot rely on Moore's anymore...
I used to hate WebSphere with a passion but learning JACL made me love the poor misunderstood abomination that is WebSphere.
Everything is scriptable, and I mean Everything . I had a bash scripter learn it. And now we have the ability to remotely deploy a full WebSphere installation on an server already running up to 8 other installations, configure it, install the requested applications! All that from a shell based wizard. The actual utilization of the script is about 30 seconds long and it's execution time is about 20 minutes long if you also want to install a couple of applications. The wizard takes care of everything in one pass except evidently the installation of the yet to be generated CSR reply. However, the wizard also takes care of that if you select install received CSR CRT reply's....
HOWEVER, the above message only applies to WebSphere, no an atrocity with a name like WebSphere Lotus Inventory Maximo Enterprise Management EditionIf a product from IBM with a name designed by chtulu himself is under you care, I am sorry for you
egrep -n '^[a-z].*\(' $ | sort -t':' +2.0