Posts Tagged ‘Oracle’

HP seeks EU backing in Oracle Itanium case

November 28th, 2011

Computer giant Hewlett-Packard is calling on European antitrust regulators to investigate whether Oracle is using its powerful position in the software market to damage HP’s hardware business.

HP dubbed Oracle’s behaviour “anti-customer”, accusing the company of trying to force HP’s customers to purchase servers from Sun Microsystems, which had been bought by Oracle.

The two companies took the matter to a California state court in June, where they continue to debate the case. Oracle has meanwhile accused HP of fraud, saying the only reason Intel continues to invest in Itanium is because it is secretly contracted to do so.

HP’s attorney Robert Cooper said the European issues were separate from its US lawsuit. However, Oracle’s attorney Daniel Wall told Reuters that HP are “literally around the world to every antitrust jurisdiction, trying to say we’re trying to put them out of business”.

It’s unclear whether the European Commission will take up any investigation of Oracle.

Meanwhile, HP announced this week that it has updated the road map for its high-end Integrity servers to include systems that can accommodate both Xeon and Itanium-based servers side by side.

HP hopes that the move will help to to deflect criticism against Itanium, claiming that the new systems are being developed because customers want the choice to use lower-cost x86 hardware alongside Itanium-based servers for running mission critical applications.

“Customers have embraced our mission critical infrastructure with systems like Superdome 2, and the scalable [Itanium] blades running HP-UX, and we’ll continue to develop those platforms along with technologies like Nonstop and OpenVMS,” said Lorraine Bartlett, vice president of marketing and strategy for Business Critical Systems, HP .

“But while there’s continued demand for mission-critical capability on Unix platforms, there’s a continued message from customers about needing to get more efficient with IT budgets, and continued pressure to do more with less.”

Source:http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/news/software/3321039/hp-seeks-eu-backing-in-oracle-itanium-case/

Oracle uses Sun to put heat on IBM, HP: Ellison

October 5th, 2011

Oracle chief executive Larry Ellison on Sunday boasted that the acquisition of business computer equipment firm Sun Microsystems had helped turn up the heat on rivals IBM and Hewlett-Packard.

Ellison kicked off Oracle’s annual conference in San Francisco by touting high performance systems created by combining Sun hardware with the business software for which his company is known.

“When we first bought Sun, people said we would get out of the hardware business,” Ellison said during an opening presentation at the conference.

“I guess we didn’t get the memo,” he quipped before extolling the power and cost-efficiency of Oracle machines such as Exadata, Exalogic, and Sparc Super Cluster.

At one point Ellison displayed the title of the Ernest Hemingway novel “The Sun Also Rises” on a giant screen as he mocked critics who said the acquisition meant Sun was dead.

“You know, every night the sun sets but the sun also rises,” Ellison said.

Oracle bought Sun in a 5.17-billion-euro (7.57-billion-dollar) deal completed early last year after it got the clearance of competition watchdogs in Europe.

Acquiring Sun, a one-time Silicon Valley star and developer of the popular Java programming language, put software titan Oracle in the hardware business as a rival to longtime partners such as IBM and HP.

Ellison boasted computing systems “orders of magnitude” faster than competitors and prior generations by using multiple devices working simultaneously to process, store, or organize information.

He also unveiled an Exalytics Intelligence Machine crafted to find and analyze stored data “at the speed of thought.”

“If you design the hardware and software in concert you can do a better job,” Ellison said. “Apple, for example, is doing a pretty good job designing hardware and software.”

Approximately 45,000 people have registered to attend the weeklong Oracle Open World gathering, which is packed with sessions focused on using the Northern California company’s technology.

The event is known for its grand moments, which this week will feature laser light shows and music performances by Sting and Tom Petty.

Source:http://www.vancouversun.com/business/technology/Oracle+uses+heat+Ellison/5493676/story.html

Oracle’s Ellison Unveils Faster System to Challenge SAP, IBM

October 4th, 2011

Oracle Corp. introduced two new computer systems, one with faster data access and another for organizing information from the Web, as it aims to win market share from International Business Machines Corp. and SAP AG.

Chief Executive Officer Larry Ellison unveiled one system yesterday, called the Exalytics Intelligence Machine, that analyzes information within its dynamic random access memory. The approach makes the product many times faster than machines that store data on disk drives, Ellison said in a speech at the company’s OpenWorld conference in San Francisco.

Thomas Kurian, an executive vice president, said today that Oracle will release another system, dubbed the Big Data Appliance, to sort information collected by the open-source software Hadoop — used for unstructured data such as e-mails and social media postings — and load it into Oracle’s database.

Oracle — the world’s largest maker of database software and the second-biggest maker of business applications, behind SAP — is seeking to keep its database relevant for computing jobs that involve increasing amounts of information. Embracing open-source software tools like Hadoop may help the company hold its lead in the market as customers seek ways to sift through information from new sources, such as Facebook and Twitter.

‘New Stuff’

“When you talk about big data, this is new stuff,” said Peter Goldmacher, an analyst at Cowen & Co. in San Francisco. “It’s not cost savings — it’s an opportunity for IT to drive growth.”

For example, companies could meld information from Twitter with customer data stored in Oracle’s database to decide which customers’ posts are most important, Goldmacher said.

The Big Data Appliance system also includes a so-called NoSQL database that can store large quantities of information from Web applications and social-media sites, Kurian said.

Responding to Ellison’s introduction of the DRAM-based Exalytics system, Sanjay Poonen, president for global solutions at SAP, said Oracle’s approach to in-memory computing requires customers to buy and maintain more hardware than a competitive SAP system, called Hana.

“They’ve taken old technology and thrown more hardware at it,” he said. “It’s another machine you have to buy.”

Hana will soon let users analyze data from the Web gathered with Hadoop, Poonen said.

Sparc Chips

Ellison also said that Redwood City, California-based Oracle plans another update to its Sparc microprocessor next year that’s twice as fast as its recently released T4 chip. The idea is to challenge IBM for more hardware sales through Oracle’s Sun Microsystems unit, gained in a $7.4 billion acquisition last year.

“We want to take IBM on in their strongest suit, which is the microprocessor,” Ellison said. Oracle’s T4 chip runs software written in the Java programming language faster in a benchmark test than a competitive IBM system, he said. The company introduced a new Sparc SuperCluster system on Sept. 26 using the Sparc T4.

Steve Mills, an IBM senior vice president, said Ellison may struggle to make inroads with the Sparc chip. Oracle would have to make billions of dollars in investments to keep Sparc competitive with IBM and Intel Corp. in the future, he said last week in an interview.

“Sparc’s out of gas,” Mills said.

Oracle’s Sun hardware sales declined 1.4 percent to $1.67 billion in the three months ended in August as it emphasized more-profitable systems over lower-priced ones.

High-End Hardware

Oracle has been pushing high-end computer hardware, including its Exadata system loaded with database software, and Exalogic, a system that runs business applications. Ellison reiterated that Oracle has sold 1,000 of the Exadata machines to companies, including Procter & Gamble Co. and BNP Paribas SA, and could sell 3,000 more this year.

Oracle is integrating its hardware and software lines to deliver better performance for various computing tasks, co- President Mark Hurd said during the conference today.

In a separate interview with “Bloomberg West,” Hurd said Oracle would focus on internal growth for the time being after making about 70 acquisitions in recent years. The company also may increase research-and-development spending this year from the $4.5 billion it spent in the fiscal year ended May 31, he said.

Hurd said he’s spending 80 percent of his time at OpenWorld meeting with customers, who are spending on areas such as mobile computing and making data available faster to their users.

“We’re very focused this second on organic growth,” Hurd said. “We feel great about our portfolio.”

Source:http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-10-03/oracle-s-ellison-unveils-faster-system-to-challenge-sap-ibm.html

Oracle’s Ellison shows off new tech hardware

October 3rd, 2011

Oracle chief executive Larry Ellison unveiled new all-in-one data center products as the world’s No.3 software maker steps up its move into the hardware market. Speaking on Sunday at the start of Oracle’s annual technology and user conference in San Francisco, Ellison touted the benefits of parallel computing and showed off the latest version of the company’s SPARC Solaris computer.

He also unveiled Oracle’s new Exalytics data analysis machine, “hardware and software engineered to deliver data analysis at the speed of thought,” Ellison said at the OpenWorld conference, which is expected to attract more than 40,000 people. With its multi-billion purchase of Sun Microsystems last year, Oracle is aggressively stepping into the hardware business and competing against vendors including former partner Hewlett-Packard.

Ellison spent much of his speech pitching the idea of parallel computing, where computers are built with multiple processors and other components that work simultaneously, improving overall performance. “How do we make this thing to go 10 times faster? Parallel everything,” Ellison said. “Lots and lots of parallel network connections moving enormous amounts of data in parallel. That’s how you make this thing go faster.”

Last year, the company launched Exalogic, combining hardware technology acquired in Oracle’s multi-billion dollar purchase of Sun Microsystems with its own software. Oracle so far has installed 1,000 of its Exadata database machines with customers and sales are going well, he said. Oracle has long compete with European software giant SAP AG and IBM in the business software and database products markets.

Source:http://ibnlive.in.com/news/oracles-ellison-shows-off-new-tech-hardware/189615-11.html

Adobe, Oracle earnings hint at business recovery

September 22nd, 2011

That’s the takeaway after strong earnings reports this week from Oracle (ORCL) and Adobe (ADBE). The companies specialize in business software, and both said sales and profit are doing better than analysts expected.

Investors cheered the news, sending shares of both companies up Wednesday. Oracle’s share price spiked nearly 8% to $30.52, and Adobe saw shares rise more than 3% to $25.49.

Still, the results weren’t enough to confirm a bona fide tech recovery. What we’re starting to see is an environment in which software sales are creeping up but hardware sales remain weak.

The PC market is still struggling in the U.S. and Western Europe, mainly because consumers have embraced Apple’s (AAPL) iPad instead of traditional computers. Forecasting firm Gartner says it expects spending by businesses and especially consumers to tighten as the economic outlook remains dark.

Expectations have been extremely low, and that may be why Oracle and Adobe were able to beat them. “There were concerns that the environment was difficult and demand trends were starting to deteriorate,” a Pacific Crest Securities analyst that covers Adobe told Bloomberg. “The guidance looks pretty strong.”

Adobe makes Photoshop and other graphic design programs. It also sells customer management and online marketing systems for businesses.

It gave a sales forecast of $1.08 billion to $1.13 billion for the fourth quarter. Analysts were expecting $1.07 billion. The company estimated profit at 57 cents to 64 cents a share, while analysts were expecting 58 cents.

For the quarter ended Sept. 2, sales rose 2.3% to $1.01 billion. That was a little lower than the $1.03 billion analysts were looking for. But profit topped estimates at $195.1 million, or 39 cents a share, from $230.1 million, or 44 cents, a year ago. After excluding certain costs, earnings were 55 cents, higher than the 54 cents analysts expected.

Oracle also beat analysts’ projections after seeing new software license sales rise 16%. It makes powerful computer systems that help companies manage databases, customers, the supply chain and other operations.

Profit rose 36% to $1.84 billion, or 36 cents a share, from $1.35 billion, or 27 cents a share, a year earlier. Analysts were looking for 35 cents a share. Sales rose 12% to $8.37 billion, which is about what analysts thought would happen.

Source:http://money.msn.com/stock-broker-guided/article.aspx?post=c0771a93-0009-4a75-9747-46c3abb20838

Oracle quarterly profit up 36 percent

September 21st, 2011

Oracle (ORCL) said Tuesday that it’s not seeing any effects from a troubled global economy, as strong demand for its commercial software helped drive up sales and profit for its most recent fiscal quarter, even as the company’s hardware business declined for the second consecutive period.

CEO Larry Ellison defended the company’s new hardware operation as a work in progress, telling analysts on a conference call that Oracle is focused on selling more profitable, high-performance computer systems — and that Oracle’s hardware revenue will start growing by next year.

“I don’t care if our x86 business goes to zero,” Ellison said, referring to industry-standard computer servers that carry a lower profit margin than the high-end systems Oracle has introduced over the past two years. “We don’t make money selling x86 commodity boxes.”

The combative CEO also got in a dig at rival Hewlett-Packard (HPQ), which recently announced a $10.3 billion deal to buy British tech company Autonomy, as part of HP’s push to compete with Oracle in the commercial software business.
“Autonomy was shopped to us. We looked at the price and thought it was absurdly high,” said Ellison, adding that Oracle is improving its own database software by adding capabilities that are similar to what Autonomy offers.

Ellison spoke after Oracle reported profit of $1.8 billion for the three months ending Aug. 31, which represents a 36 percent increase from the same period a year ago. Sales rose 12 percent to $8.4 billion. Sales of new software licenses, a key source of new and recurring revenue, rose 17 percent to $1.5 billion.

The results were slightly better than Wall Street analysts were expecting, according to a survey by Thomson Reuters. Oracle also forecast that its profit will grow more than Wall Street was expecting for the quarter that ends in November, although it said revenue could grow slightly less than analysts had predicted for that period.

Oracle is one of the world’s biggest suppliers of commercial software, and its financial results are often viewed as an indicator of overall tech spending by big corporations and government agencies. Because its fiscal quarter ends several weeks later than those of its competitors, Oracle’s results provide a more current view of tech purchases.

Analysts were watching for any signs that Oracle’s business has been hurt by recent economic upheaval in Europe. Many also noted that other large tech companies, such as Cisco Systems (CSCO), have reported a sharp drop in sales to budget-strapped government agencies.

But Oracle executives said sales were healthy in Europe and other trouble spots.
“Our business was strong in all the sectors that you may be reading are struggling,” said Oracle President Safra Catz. “Our European business remains good. Our U.S. government business is still good.

Oracle’s computer hardware sales fell 5 percent, however, marking the second decline in as many quarters.
The company has been overhauling the hardware business that it acquired when it bought struggling Sun Microsystems last year. Oracle has missed its own revenue targets for hardware, and its share of the server market has diminished.

That’s made some investors nervous and contributed to a decline in Oracle’s stock price over recent months, according to analyst Patrick Walravens of JMP Securities. Oracle shares closed Tuesday at $28.35, down 2.3 percent, but rose more than 3 percent in late trading after the earnings announcement.

Oracle executives defended the company’s hardware strategy during their talk with analysts.
Co-President Mark Hurd said the company’s overall profit margin on hardware has increased, as Oracle has rewarded its sales force for selling high-end systems that are designed to integrate Oracle’s software and hardware together for better performance. Sales of those systems have increased, Hurd said, even as sales of lower-end servers have declined.

The company will introduce other new systems in coming weeks, according to Ellison, who said Oracle will phase out most of its less-profitable hardware by next year.

Analysts have cautiously accepted the company’s strategy. “Between Mark Hurd and Larry Ellison, I think they can get it right,” said Walravens, noting that Hurd was known for driving up profits when he was CEO at HP.

Hurd said Tuesday that Oracle beefed up its sales force with 350 new hires in the latest quarter. All told, Oracle’s payroll has increased from 105,236 employees a year ago to 109,388 at the end of August.

Source:http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-news/ci_18937616?nclick_check=1

Oracle adds new installer, failover to Windows MySQL

September 7th, 2011

Oracle has updated the commercial edition of its MySQL database for Windows, adding a graphical installer and the ability to do failover clustering, the company announced Tuesday.

Both of these features should help make MySQL Enterprise Edition a more viable database choice for Windows shops, potentially expanding its user base beyond enterprise Linux users, noted Oracle marketing executive Bertrand Matthelié, in a blog post announcing the features.

Oracle designed the new MySQL Installer for Windows to simplify the process of installing MySQL and its associated tools. The new user interface guides the user through the wizard-based installation process. It can install not only MySQL on a Windows computer but other associated programs as well, such as MySQL Workbench and MySQL Query Analyzer. The software also can automatically update all the MySQL products with bug fixes and upgrades as needed.

Failover clustering has also been added. This feature can be handy for those organization that require constant uptime, or high availability (HA), of their databases.

When run on Windows Server 2008 R2, MySQL Enterprise Edition can detect when a copy of MySQL stops operating, either because of hardware failure or due to some failure in the database software itself. The administrative console alerts the administrator to restart the database or server, while moving the workload over to another, duplicate, database.

Although MySQL has been capable of offering HA for awhile–through a special edition called MySQL Cluster–this version is easier to set up, requiring as few as two servers to operate

Source:http://www.pcadvisor.co.uk/news/small-business/3301744/oracle-adds-new-installer-failover-to-windows-mysql/

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes