Syracuse University

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Syracuse iSchool student Bin Sun G'10 places in international IBM mainframe competition

March 10, 2009


Margaret Costello Spillett
mcostell@syr.edu



Syracuse University School of Information Studies (iSchool) student Bin Sun G'10 won
fourth place in the IBM Master of the Mainframe competition, sponsored by IBM Academic
Initiative System z. The annual competition is designed to familiarize students with concepts
for the growing large-enterprise computing industry and build mainframe skills, enabling
them to become the business and IT leaders of tomorrow.


Sun, a student in the iSchool's M.S. in information management program, competed against
1,876 students from 315 colleges across the United States and Canada in three-part,
increasingly difficult challenges. The competition culminated with a sliding tile puzzle that
the students had to solve programmatically using JAVA, C++, REXX and assembler.


Sun learned about the competition in "Enterprise Technology" (IST 555) and says he's
grateful for the encouragement and support from iSchool professor Doug Taber. Sun says he
was able to navigate the challenges by calling on a variety of resources, including his
knowledge from iSchool and undergraduate courses, Web-based documents about
mainframes, books and online forums.


"My software engineering background gave me an edge in the final phase, which involved a
lot of programming," he says. "I didn't know how many other students were involved in the
contest, so I just focused on the problems, tried my best and hoped for the best."


Sun won a series of prizes as he advanced through the three rounds-a "Master the
Mainframe" T-shirt with 900 other top competitors, $100 pre-paid debit card with 60 others
who successfully completed the second challenge, and an MSI Wind Netbook computer
with four others who placed in the top five in the competition.


"Mainframe is known for its zero downtime and that it is widely used in many performance
critical industries," Sun says. "I think it is beneficial for iSchool students to get exposed this
technology and develop skills in this area, where a new generation of experts is very
welcomed."


About the Master the Mainframe Contest


In 2008, more than 1,876 students from 325 schools across the United States and Canada
competed in the Master the Mainframe Contest, marking the largest turnout ever. To
support the strong student interest, IBM provided access to the most current IBM System
z10 mainframe hosted at the IBM Innovation Center in Dallas. Student contestants accessed
the same high-performance computing resources that IBM's worldwide independent
software vendors currently use to port and maintain their business applications for top
clients.


Since its inception in 2005, the IBM student mainframe contests have attracted more than
14,000 student entries for thousands of prizes, including XBox 360s, Nintendo Wiis, iPods,
pre-paid debit cards and trips to mainframe plants.