Scott Klement

American computer scientist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Scott Klement, born January 28, 1969, in Milwaukee, Wisconsin[1] is an American computer scientist, author, and speaker recognized as a top evangelist for IBM i on IBM Power Systems computers. For twenty-eight years, Scott served as the IT Director of family owned Klement's Sausage, which was sold to Altamont Capital Partners in 2014.[2] In 2012 he left to work for Profound Logic Corporation.[3][4] Scott is a member of the Strategic Education Team (SET) and a Subject Matter Expert (SME) at COMMON, the largest association of users of IBM compatible technology in the world. He has developed numerous frameworks and other open-source development tools, often works that make other technology accessible to the IBM i technology directly from RPG.[5] Many developments by others, including Thomas Raddatz as well as IBM itself, make use of Klement's software in products of their own.[6] His work in developing tools which open the i is widely quoted by others, including sockets and other tools in the book Hacking iSeries,[7] and UNIXCMD, which allows PHP to access UNIX commands from a script.[8][9] In addition, Klement was a frequent contributor to various Penton Media trade magazines.

Personal

Scott resides in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, with his wife and son. He is an avid player of the sheepshead card game.[10] He was also a mentor for FRC Team 2506 Saber Robotics at Franklin High School (Wisconsin).[11]

Awards

In 2005, Klement was awarded the Intellectual Solutions Award by IBM and COMMON for his website, which provided multiple tutorials and open source software to the IBM i community.[12] He also received the Gary Guthrie Award for Excellence in Technical Writing[13] and the silver medal for Best Feature Series by the American Society of Business Publication Editors (ASBPE).[14][15] Klement's skill is recognized as one of the best in the industry.[16] In 2012 Klement, along with Jim Buck and Aaron Bartell, was named a "Champion of Power" by IBM for their contributions to the Power Systems community.[17] He has been called "The most interesting man in the RPG world".[18] In 2023, he was the first inducted to the Common Europe "Hall of Fame" for his contributions to the IBM i world.

Partial list of frameworks and open-source projects

More information Category, Title/Description ...
CategoryTitle/DescriptionReferences
Base 64 encode-decodeservice program to encode/decode Base64[19]
EXPAT XML Parsera port of the open-source Expat XML parser to i[20][21]
FTPAPIProgrammatic granular control of FTP on i[22]
HSSFR4A service program simplifying use of POI to read and write Excel from RPG[23]
HTTPAPIConsuming SOAP and RESTful Web Services in RPG[19]
JDBCR4JDBC driven by RPG[19]
JSONported Yet another JSON Compiler (YAJL)[24]
Linux Tn5250An open-source 5250 emulator for Linux, FreeBSD, etc.[19]
SNTP ProgramTime syncer[19]
UNIXCMDRun Qshell commands from RPG using f-spec[19]
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References

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