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posted by chromas on Friday August 03 2018, @01:13PM   Printer-friendly
from the never-saw-it-coming dept.

Add Topic: Software

CNBC reports Amazon Plans to Move Completely off Oracle Software by Early 2020:

Amazon's emergence as a major provider of data center technology has turned many of its longtime suppliers, including Oracle, into heated rivals.

Now Amazon is dealing yet another blow to Oracle. The e-commerce giant, having already moved much of its infrastructure internally to Amazon Web Services, plans to be completely off Oracle's proprietary database software by the first quarter of 2020, according to people familiar with the matter.

The shift is another sign of Amazon's rapid ascent in enterprise computing and further shows how much Oracle is struggling to keep pace as businesses move workloads to the cloud and away from traditional data centers. Propelled in part by expansion at AWS, which reported 49 percent revenue growth for the second quarter, Amazon passed Alphabet earlier this year to become the second most valuable publicly traded company in the world.

Meanwhile, Oracle is about the same size it was four years ago and the stock is just above where it was trading at the end of 2014. Oracle shares dropped by about 1 percent after the initial report Wednesday.

[...] The primary issue Amazon has faced on Oracle is the inability for the database technology to scale to meet Amazon's performance needs, a person familiar with the matter said. Another person, who said the move could be completed by mid-2019, added that there hasn't been any development of new technology relying on Oracle databases for quite a while.

Amazon's infrastructure is certainly not foolproof. The company's constant need for capacity upgrades turned into a near crisis during Amazon's Prime Day shopping extravaganza last month, when the company's systems proved incapable of handling a sudden traffic surge.

[...] The two companies have been in a heated war of words. Last year Oracle executives boasted about the cost advantages of using its database software. AWS CEO Andy Jassy fired back a few weeks later in an interview with CNBC, saying that Oracle is "a long way away in the cloud."

I have some Oracle experience from many years ago. Even then it was known for being very expensive, but it DID have all kinds of "knobs" you could adjust to tweak out extra performance that other databases just could not [easily] match. How well does Oracle compete today? Would you say they were worth the expense?


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  • (Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Friday August 03 2018, @07:11PM

    by MichaelDavidCrawford (2339) Subscriber Badge <mdcrawford@gmail.com> on Friday August 03 2018, @07:11PM (#716903) Homepage Journal

    "Cover Oregon"

    When the site was allegedly launched, Oracle placed ten million dollars worth of state-paid ads that said nothing other than "Cover Oregon" without mentioning anything about insurance. The ads didn't even mention the URL.

    When I tried to shop for insurance with Safari I was bluntly informed that Cover Oregon only worked with Internet Explorer

    The state sued Oracle for racketeering and Oracle sued the state for failure to pay

    --
    Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]
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