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To: databoss; HAL9000
looks like acxion wants a little of the action?

btw, what's your take on the excerpt from article posted above?

Planning Research Corp. kept the WHODB general maintenance contract for itself, and farmed out the rest of the work to three companies: Pulsar Data Systems, Subsystems Tech Inc., and Integrated Data Systems. Integrated Data did the schematics for setting up WHODB for its intended purposes, while Pulsar Data Systems supplied the actual software.

WHODB was set up to also provide access to other data bases, such as those of the Secret Service and FinCEN. WHODB can log onto the FBI computer, but the FBI system contains a block preventing any direct White House access to its files. To get an FBI file, the White House must submit a "request" in the front end of the FBI system. A designated FBI employee then looks at the request, and uploads the appropriate file directly into WHODB. (No White House request for FBI files has been denied.) No paper records are normally involved in this transfer. If a White House Craig Livingstone-type wants a hard copy of someone's FBI file, he hits the print button and produces one on a White House laser printer.

9 posted on 12/06/2001 12:33:10 PM PST by thinden
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To: thinden
As I recall, Promis was considered such a Breakthrough partly or mostly because it gave potential to cross over into almost every other type of Database, regardless of type/format. Somebody more knowledgeable can accurize that for me.
13 posted on 12/06/2001 12:41:09 PM PST by rdavis84
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