20.3.12

Oracle R12 VMWARE Image - Pre-Installed Vision Demo Environment

  • Are you bored to learn Oracle R12 from powerpoint slides, pdfs and online tutorials?
  • Have you ever wanted your own personal Oracle testing environment installed in your notebook or desktop with WinXP/Vista/Win7 ?
  • Do you have slow or unstable internet/network/modem connection to connect and work in remote testing environment?
  • Are you not willing to spend time and bandwidth by downloading 50GB+ of installation files?
  • Are you not willing to bother with installation difficulties?
  • Are you not willing to install Linux into virtual machine environment?
  • Are you not willing to install Oracle application and Database server?


If you are an independent consultant, contractor, a company that wants to evaluate Oracle eBusiness Suite or simply curious to learn about R12, this package is for you!!! We understand our customers and all they need is just simple solution to be able to access the Oracle Testing Environment. We have a great solution for you. You can have your own Oracle R12 E-Business Suite Testing environment available in your computer as easy as it gets. We have been through all the difficulties instead of you and we are glad to offer you already pre-installed R12 Vision Demo Environment containing all modules as VMware image.


Visit our eshop: eshop.espaceconsulting.eu

Buy the already Pre-installed Oracle R12 E-Business Suite Vision Demo as VMWare Image on external HDD. We ship worldwide!


This package contains:

- Samsung S2 Portable External HDD 2.5'' 500GB or 1000GB, USB 3.0
- VMWare image with pre-installed Oracle Linux Server 6.2 (32-Bit)
- Pre-installed Oracle E-Business Suite R12.1.1 Vision Demo environment (350 GB)
- Detailed Installation and Support Documentation
- VMware-Player-4.0.2-591240
- VirtualBox-4.1.8-75467-Win
 


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13.3.12

Oracle rating cut, Jefferies cites challenges

Analyst cites threat from SAP and software-as-a-service trend. Shares of Oracle Corp. fell Monday after a Jefferies&Co. analyst downgraded the business software company, pointing to the quickening shift to the so-called software-as-a-service trend as a looming competitive threat.

The stock moved back below the $30 mark after analyst Ross MacMillan cut his rating to hold from buy on Oracle ORCL +0.07% , which he said faces “increased challenges to growth.” Oracle lost 1.4% to close at $29.71.

MacMillan cited several areas of concern, including threats to Oracle’s core database business such as the one posed by rival SAP AG SAP +0.35% . The German company, he argued, “is starting to offer customers an alternative to the relational database for part of their footprint.” “It’s a first step and SAP has big ambitions for the technology which, if successful, creates tail risk for Oracle,” MacMillan added.

MacMillan also highlighted the ongoing shift to the emerging software-as-a-service model, in which companies access and pay for business applications as a Web-based service. This has allowed businesses to gain access to applications for such tasks as managing inventory and keeping track of payroll through the Web.

Customers typically pay a fee based on the number of users, allowing companies to save costs of running their own in-house networks. On the other hand, traditional software companies such as Oracle make money by licensing their products to businesses.

MacMillan said the momentum of such software-as-a-service companies as Salesforce.com CRM -0.18% and privately held Workday “creates risk for some of Oracle’s large application assets as well as database revenues.” Redwood City, Calif.-based Oracle will report results for the third quarter of fiscal 2012 March 20.

Source: Benjamin Pimentel, MarketWatch


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24.1.12

Oracle Database Book and eBook Published: Boost Performance with the Oracle Database 11gR2 Performance Tuning Cookbook

Packt Publishing, one of the world’s leading Publishers of Oracle Training material, is pleased to announce the publication of Oracle Database 11gR2 Performance Tuning Cookbook, a new book and ebook aimed at newcomers to the Oracle Database seeking to solve performance problems faster and in a rigorous way. 

Birmingham: Packt Publishing, one of the world’s leading Publishers of Oracle Training material, is pleased to announce the publication of Oracle Database 11gR2 Performance Tuning Cookbook, a new book and ebook aimed at newcomers to the Oracle Database seeking to solve performance problems faster and in a rigorous way.

Written in a cookbook style by Cirol Fiorillo, Oracle Database 11gR2 Performance Tuning Cookbook is filled with real recipes offering solutions starting from application design and development, through the implementation of well-performing applications, to the details of deployment and delivering best-performance databases. Readers will learn to implement fast and scalable SQL and PL/SQL code, and choose the correct structures to store the data and access them.
Each recipe in the book is based on a script/procedure explained step-by-step, and is aimed at software developers, software and data architects, and DBAs who work with the Oracle Database.
Packt Publishing has developed and published many books on the Oracle Database, and some of the recent titles include:
  •     Oracle Information Integration, Migration, and Consolidation
  •     OCA Oracle Database 11g: SQL Fundamentals I: A Real World Certification Guide (1ZO-051)
  •     Oracle 10g/11g Data and Database Management Utilities
  •     Oracle Database 11g – Underground Advice for Database Administrators
  •     Mastering Oracle Scheduler in Oracle 11g Databases
  •     And many more. All Packt’s Oracle books can be found on the Oracle books page.

 Source: http://www.prweb.com


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2.1.12

Ellison’s son is an Oracle of movie hits

When “Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol” topped the box office last weekend, it was a surprising outcome to many.

But for the 28-year-old son of Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, the film’s success was a vindication of his early support for the project that led him to finance half of its $145 million budget.

The latest “Mission: Impossible” film is just one of several movies being co-financed by Paramount and Skydance, the production and financing company started by Larry Ellison’s son, David.

Skydance gives Paramount a way to share the risk on big-budget films or movies with uncertain commercial prospects.

When Skydance finalized its deal with Paramount in 2010, the studio had been without a long-term financing partner since 2008. In the interim, the studio had been relying on various companies like Spyglass.

But Paramount still had a strong track record at the box office, which, along with the fact that the studio seemed to be looking for a strategic partner, appealed to David Ellison.

A source close to the deal says the studio reached an agreement with Ellison in part because execs discovered they and the Oracle scion had very similar tastes.

But another source familiar with the situation indicated that the fact that David was Larry Ellison’s son made Paramount feel like he was a reliable investor.

Indeed, Larry Ellison supplied an undisclosed amount of the $150 million in equity Skydance raised. Skydance also put together $200 million in a revolving -credit facility led by JPMorgan.

Paramount offers films it wants Skydance to co-finance to Ellison’s company early in their development. The percentage of the budget Skydance finances depends on the film.

The partnership has provided Paramount with a way to hedge their bets on risky movies like the Coen brothers’ Western, “True Grit”; Skydance financed 50 percent of its $38 million budget.

More recently, Skydance stepped in to help finance Paramount’s reportedly pricey zombie film, “World War Z.” The deal also gives Paramount an option to distribute movies that Skydance develops.

Source: HILARY LEWIS @ http://www.nypost.com/


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19.12.11

Oracle, Cisco crow new database flash dash record

Best 2-CPU server result ever - with Violin's chips. Oracle claims a world-record TPC-C result with its database running on a Cisco server and not an Exadata system, although doesn't mention that two Violin memory flash arrays were needed.

A Cisco UCS C250 extended memory server with two six-core Xeon X5690 processors, 384GB of DRAM, and two Violin Memory flash arrays (5.3TB V-3205 and 16.3TB V-6000) ran Oracle's 11g database on Oracle Linux, and scored 1,053,100 transactions per minute (tpmC), with a cost per transaction of $0.58.

This was the third lowest cost-per-tpmC ever, only being beaten by the $0.49/tpmC and $0.51/tpmC of two four-processor HP Proliant systems running SQL Server. The $0.51/tpmC result used six Violin Memory V3200 flash arrays, each with with 2.6TB of flash. The $0.49 HP result used flash as well; HP P2000 array with 128 300GB SAS disk drives and D2700 enclosure with 256 120GB SSDs.

Oracle says its tech "delivered more performance, and cost nearly 11 per cent less per tpmC than the nearest competition on a configuration using identical Intel processors and memory capacity", referring to an HP result of 1,024,380 tpmC and $0.65/tpmC with a ProLiant DL380. This server featured 81 400GB SSDs plus 104 disk drives.

Both Cisco's and Oracle's canned quotes somehow forgot to mention the Violin arrays, which was somewhat surprising as the Violin storage represented the vast majority of the $602,316 bill for the tested configuration.

Kevin Closson, a technology director and performance architect in the Data Computing Division of EMC, tweeted about the result, saying: "Style: Get world record result and don't mention key storage technology that made it possible. See the word Violin?"

He also said that Violin doesn't mention Oracle on its benchmark result page, which is not quite true; the Violin page has a hot-link to the Cisco UCS tpmC result which does mention Oracle.

Source: Chris Mellor @ http://www.theregister.co.uk


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14.12.11

Oracle CEO's beautiful Woodside farm

Have a look at this interesting business news article:

Oracle CEO's beautiful Woodside farm - Rediff.com Business
Passionate about buying land, Ellison, co-founder and chief executive officer of Oracle Corporation, has acquired some of most beautiful houses and land since the 1990's. | Oracle CEO's beautiful...
Read entire article >

Cheers,
Ondrej Kubes


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12.12.11

Oracle JRockit is Free – Learn All About it with Packt's Oracle JRockit Book and eBook

Oracle JRockit is a high performing Java Virtual Machine which, earlier this year, was made free and publicly available by Oracle Corporation. Now is the time for Java Developers to learn all about JRockit using: Oracle JRockit: The Definitive Guide – a book and eBook from Packt Publishing.

Oracle JRockit is a high performing Java Virtual Machine which, earlier this year, was made free and publicly available by Oracle Corporation.
Now is the time for Java Developers to learn all about JRockit using: Oracle JRockit: The Definitive Guide – a book and eBook from Packt Publishing. This book helps Java Developers gain in-depth knowledge of Java from the JVM’s point of view. It explains how to write code that works well with the JVM to gain performance and scalability. Starting with the inner workings of the JRockit JVM and finishing with a thorough walkthrough of the tools in the JRockit Mission Control suite, this book is for anyone who wants to know more about how the JVM executes Java applications and how to profile for better performance.

Written by two of the core team members of the JRockit team – Marcus Hirt and Marcus Lagergren – this book will be a valuable addition to the bookshelves of anyone seeking to work with a high performance JVM. The book is available in print, ebook, kindle and select library formats.

About Packt Enterprise. Packt Enterprise is one of the world’s leading publishers of Oracle Fusion Middleware information. Titles in recent years have included: Oracle ADF Enterprise Application Development—Made Simple Getting Started with Oracle BPM Suite 11gR1 – A Hands-On Tutorial Oracle Weblogic Server 11gR1 PS2: Administration Essentials Oracle SOA Suite 11g R1 Developer's Guide And many more.

Packt is committed to serving the informational needs of all Oracle professionals and has launched its own in-house library platform: PacktLib. The Oracle collection on PacktLib allows web access to all Packt’s Oracle titles, and users are free to print, copy, and paste. The library costs $120 per year, and contains more than sixty titles. Source: http://www.prweb.com


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5.12.11

SAP Targets Salesforce.com, Oracle With SuccessFactors Buy

SAP is paying $3.4 billion, whichis a lot of money for SuccessFactors, in order to gain some real cloud computing clout versus rivals Salesforce.com and Oracle. Should SAP AG (NYSE:SAP) consummate its $3.4 billion offer to acquire Web-based human resources software maker SuccessFactors (NASDAQ:SFSF) , it will give the enterprise application giant some much needed credibility in cloud computing versus rivals Salesforce.com (NYSE:CRM) and Oracle (NASDAQ:ORCL).

SAP certainly showed that it needs the clout, paying $40 per share, or roughly a 52 percent premium over the company's Dec. 2 closing price of $26.25 and a multiple of 10 times the company's expected 2011 run rate of $300 to $330 million. That's a lot of money for an unprofitable company that provides performance management and other tools human resource managers use to keep companies humming along.
Forrester Research analyst Paul Hamerman said SAP inked the deal for a couple key reasons. For one, its cloud strategy, led by its Business ByDesign product, has been slow grow in the market. For another, while SAP's existing on-premise HR management software has over 13,000 customers, the company's learning and talent management applications are only used by a few thousand of those clients.

The apps just haven't been on par with rivals' products, which means fewer opportunities to on-board new and existing customers to its own human capital management software. That weakness has set up a scenario with big-time SAP customer Siemens AG uses SuccessFactors' talent management apps for its 400,000-plus employees.

"By acquiring SuccessFactors, SAP puts itself into a much stronger competitive position in human resources applications and reaffirms its commitment to software-as-a-service as a key business model," Hamerman wrote in a blog post Dec. 3.

Indeed, SAP will gain SuccessFactors 15 million active seats spread across not only Siemens AG, but 20th Century Fox and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, among its more than 3,500 customers.

SAP's bid for SuccessFactors advance the growing trend of larger companies snapping up smaller providers of enterprise application software delivered through a Web browser.
Earlier this year, Salesforce.com landed on Radian6, reconstituting the concern's social monitoring software into its Social Marketing Cloud just last week.

Oracle acquired Web-based customer relationship management (CRM) software provider RightNow Technologies in October to better compete with Salesforce.com. SAP's bid for SuccessFactors shows it wants to be an active participant in the burgeoning cloud market.

Global Equities Research analyst Trip Chowdry called SAP's bid for Success Factors timely in the wake of Oracle's bid for RightNow and the database software giant's impending Oracle Public Cloud suite.

"As we have said before, now that every company has a cloud strategy including products and services - cloud computing is not an industry but a necessary feature offering," Chowdry wrote in a Dec. 3 research note.

Chowdry believes Salesforce.com and SAP have much to fear from Oracle's Public Cloud, which Salesforce.com CEO Marc Benioff has described as virtualization software.

Source: Clint Boulton @ www.eweek.com


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2.12.11

UK Oracle user groups partner to build stronger network

Aims to grow influence on Oracle with combined membership of 38,000. The UK Oracle User Group (UKOUG) has announced a partnership with the UK Oracle Community Network (UKOCN), to build on the strength of the Oracle community in the UK.

The organisations will work together to ensure that their members have access to relevant resources, as well as forming a larger independent voice to have greater influence on Oracle at a strategic level. Established for more than 25 years, the UKOUG has more than 8,000 members, while UKOCN – a free-to-join, online community that started two years ago – has 30,000 subscribed members.

James Haslam, general manager of UKOUG, said: "UKOUG and UKOCN are very different Oracle community bodies. UKOUG focuses on face-to-face events, networking and lobby activities. "While we both operate in the Oracle space, we are not competing organisations." He added: "The Oracle community can only benefit from a partnership between the two organisations, which will inevitably lead to a louder, more vibrant, better informed community. The partnership will begin with UKOCN promoting UKOUG events to its membership and partners, starting with the UK OUG Conference in Birmingham next week. Meanwhile, UKOUG will promote UKOCN's online services and benefits to its membership base.

The annual UKOUG conference is taking place at the ICC in Birmingham from 5 to 7 December.

Source: http://www.computerworlduk.com


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1.12.11

Alight Planning Announces Oracle Gold Partnership

The developers of the first application that set the standard for Enterprise Planning software today announced that Alight has achieved Gold Partner status in the Oracle PartnerNetwork (OPN). Alight is committed to delivering Agile Planning™ solutions to Oracle users, that add value at both the business unit and corporate levels. Alight LLC, developers of the industry-leading Alight Planning financial planning and reporting software, today announced that it has joined Oracle’s partnership program at the Gold level.

As the leader and industry spokesperson for budgeting and enterprise planning solutions, Rand Heer, Alight’s CEO was delighted to be selected as an Oracle Gold Partner. Rand, who founded Pillar, the first enterprise planning software package, reflects on some important history to frame this partnership, “In 1994, Hyperion acquired Pillar. With over 2,500 customers purchasing Hyperion Pillar, the deal proved to be one of the great cash cows of the decade. Ironically, though in 2007, Oracle acquired Hyperion and finally killed Pillar which was replaced with Hyperion Planning. Some Pillar users did not make the move to Hyperion Planning including Apple Computer which is still using Pillar at the time of our partnership because Pillar had some beautiful functionality especially around unit rate amounts.”
Jeffrey Walker who built Oracle's applications business and was also CFO at Oracle was pleased to learn of the partnership, “Looking back on it, it’s too bad we at Oracle didn’t pick up on Pillar and Rand’s vision before Hyperion. You can see the Pillar foundations for enterprise planning today in offerings from Oracle, IBM, and SAP. With Alight, Rand advances his vision to new heights and makes his planning tools accessible to companies of all sizes—not just big players with deep pockets. I expect the partnership with Oracle will lead to big things for both parties.”

The news of the partnership is quite exciting to finance and IT teams who are already working with both Alight and Oracle. Mark Brinkerhoff, VP Finance with Ultradent, is eager to reap the benefits of this new relationship, “Before Alight was selected as an Oracle Gold Partner, I have been able to get our financial data out of Oracle Financials and into Alight. We have a complex chart of accounts so we leverage Alight’s logfiles feature which gives us complete visibility if something slips during an import. While data integration from Oracle to our spreadsheet model often took several days, we can get our Oracle data integrated into Alight in about one business day. With Oracle Gold Partner status, Alight's import process with Oracle Financials is on track to get even better in 2012." In addition to Ultradent, dozens of companies who use both the Alight Planning solution and Oracle/Hyperion applications should benefit from this new partnership including mid-sized companies such as Atronix and larger organizations such as Siemens PLM Software.


Source: http://news.yahoo.com


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30.11.11

Oracle holds “Oracle Day” in Amman to inspire customer innovation

As part of its ongoing EMEA Oracle Day roadshow, Oracle today held “Oracle Day” in Amman, Jordan to share with local customers and the local IT community the latest innovations unveiled at Oracle OpenWorld 2011 event in San Francisco, California, earlier this month.

Held under the headline “More Expertise. More Innovation. More Insight”, the Oracle Day event was a powerhouse combination of C-level, functional, and technology tracks, all dedicated to one goal: showing Oracle customers and prospects how the power of simplicity can change IT to a force that drives business innovation.

Among the key unveilings of Oracle Open World which were highlighted during the event in Amman was Oracle Exalytics Business Intelligence Machine, the industry’s first in-memory hardware and software system engineered to run analytics faster than ever, provide real-time speed-of-thought visual analysis, and enable new types of analytic applications.


With Oracle Exalytics, organizations will be able to extend their business intelligence initiatives beyond reporting and dashboards to modeling, planning, forecasting, and predictive analytics. Planning applications can be scaled across the enterprise with faster, more accurate planning cycles.

The event in Amman also focused on Oracle Public Cloud, the only public cloud offering that provides customers with truly flexible deployment by enabling them to run the exact same business applications in the cloud and on-premise.

Oracle Public Cloud is a broad set of best-in-class, integrated services that provide customers with subscription-based, self-service access to Oracle Fusion Applications, Oracle Fusion Middleware and Oracle Database, all completely managed, hosted and supported by Oracle.

Source: http://www.albawaba.com


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29.11.11

Atos and Oracle join hands for TAM for Oracle

To deliver test & acceptance management services for Oracle Fusion Technology IT services provider Atos announced that it was working with Oracle to deliver test & acceptance management (TAM) services for Oracle Fusion Technology.

This new solution would offer customers in all industries a flexible and cost efficient way to manage their testing requirements. The complete solution reportedly reflects the combination of Atos' innovative approach, which facilitates end-to-end traceability based on business process, functional tests case management, and Oracle's technology.

TAM for Oracle, it is said, covers full lifecycle management including deployment of Oracle Fusion Applications in heterogeneous Information Systems. Atos senior vice president business development & innovation François Gruau said that they were delighted to offer IT acceptance testing services for Oracle Fusion Applications.

Oracle vice president product strategy and business development Sushil Kumar said Oracle Application Testing Suite provides the most comprehensive testing technologies for Oracle Fusion Applications.

Source: http://enterpriseapplications.cbronline.com


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28.11.11

Bessemer Picks EIR from Oracle

Bessemer Venture Partners, a global investment firm, has appointed Jeff Epstein as an executive in residence (EIR). He will be working along with the investment team to evaluate a broad range of opportunities in areas including cloud computing, Internet advertising technology and consumer Internet. In addition, he will help the firm’s portfolio companies with strategic initiatives, planning and operational excellence.

Epstein joins Bessemer from technology company Oracle, where he was executive vice president and CFO. He is currently a member of the board of directors of Priceline.com, the audit and compliance committee of the Stanford University Hospital and the management board of the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

Source: http://www.institutionalinvestor.com


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24.11.11

Zensar Bags Deals For Oracle, SAP Solutions

Zensar Technologies, the offshore outsourcing company has announced a surge in its Enterprise Application business encompassing Oracle and SAP Solutions. The overall values of these deals are close to 25 million USD with significant new wins in key geographies.

These deals have firmly embedded Zensar as a leading system integrator for Oracle Fusion Middleware (FMW), E Business Suite and Business Intelligence solutions delivering business value and enabling enterprises to create and run agile, intelligent business applications while maximising IT efficiency through full utilisation of modern hardware and software architecture.

In the US, Zensar has just bagged a multi-million dollar contract with the world’s leading provider of Conflict Management and Dispute Resolution Services, to develop and integrate its Case Management System and related business process to various end systems using FMW technology. The Company has also bagged the FMW implementation and support contract from the leading global interactive entertainment software company in the US that develops, publishes, and distributes interactive software worldwide for video game systems. In the UK, the Company has implemented a FMW and Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition at a leading High Street and On-Line Fashion Retailer. The solution deployed is one of the first few implementations globally involving Retail Data Model.

Zensar has also reported on a number of new wins in the Oracle Retail Practice in the UAE and Saudi Arabia. Zensar continues to do well in Process and Discrete Manufacturing winning new deals Oracle Implementations in the US and Middle East. Zensar's manufacturing vertical offers repository of business solutions which allows for readily available frameworks to be adapted to a dynamic environment. In the domestic market, Zensar recently bagged the Maharashtra State Electricity Distribution Company to implement SAP's enterprise resource and planning software as part of over Rs 50-crore deal. The deployment will cut across all activities of the corporation such as finance, metering, human resources. “We have seen steady, high value wins in the ERP business given our own evolution toward being the next-generation Enterprise Application Services provider. This creates exciting new opportunities for revenue and services, while integrating legacy technologies to offer consumers a rich, reliable service experience. Our capabilities in integrating disparate technologies and helping customers’ reduce operating costs and bring new services to market quickly and cost effectively has helped us in bagging these multi-million dollar contracts in key markets,” said Nitin Parab, Chief Executive and Global Head - MRM (Manufacturing, Retail and Media). 

These wins reinforce Zensar’s capability in its focus verticals of Manufacturing, Retail, Insurance, Healthcare and Media and the company expects Enterprise Applications as well as Infrastructure Management, to be the drivers of growth in each of these verticals. Source: http://biztech2.in.com


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16.11.11

Oracle Continues to Develop PeopleSoft HCM

With a new feature pack for PeopleSoft Human Capital Management 9.1, Oracle brings a more consumer-like feel to its core software for human resources processes.
Six years after one of Oracle’s biggest acquisitions, users of PeopleSoft Human Capital Management software continue to receive updates to their core HR package, as they did again late last week with the release of a new feature pack for Oracle PeopleSoft HCM 9.1.

    Under its “Applications Unlimited” program, enterprise software purveyor Oracle has vowed to support a raft of applications it has acquired during a multi-billion-dollar spending spree that dates back to the middle of the last decade. Early in 2005, Oracle closed its vigorously contested, $10 billion takeover of leading human capital management software vendor PeopleSoft, a move that cemented the HCM component of Oracle’s E-Business Suite. Later that year, Oracle went on to swallow Siebel Systems, which substantiated the ERP vendor’s CRM credentials.

    Late last week, Oracle released Feature Pack 2 for the 9.1 version of PeopleSoft Human Capital Management, an update that Oracle said delivers a “consumer-like self-service” experience to HR personnel and business users. Embracing the “consumerization of IT”—the trend of imbuing enterprise software with the fluid user experience found on smartphones and tablets—Oracle has added a search-based navigation function that allows users to perform quick lookups from any page to receive contextual results. A department manager might type a worker’s name into the search function, Oracle said in a statement, to pull up documents on that employee’s performance, salary, career planning, and related activities.


    In an effort to improve the user experience in the HCM software, Oracle also added pagelets into the latest version of PeopleSoft, a feature said to deliver a more personalized experience through fewer clicks. Meanwhile, managers can customize the new PeopleSoft Manager Dashboard to display key data on their reports, unit, and projects, and can use drag-and-drop technology to customize the page to their needs.

    Also new in the second 9.1 feature pack is PeopleSoft Talent Summary. “Administrators can select the content of pagelets that will appear on the Talent Summary based on the organization’s priorities,” Oracle said, “and managers personalize the page based on their preferences for presentation layout and areas of emphasis.”

    As Oracle continues to develop its core HCM software, PeopleSoft founder Dave Duffield, who left the company when Oracle took over in 2005, continues to grow SaaS HCM vendor Workday. The vendor has recently added adjacent cogs of functionality to create a more robust suite of enterprise software, bringing it into competition with Oracle and other ERP vendors.

Source: Chris Chiappinelli at http://www.managingautomation.com


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17.3.11

Oracle kills off one of the world's oldest domain names

Oracle will pull the plug on one of the oldest Internet domain names and shut the Sun.com site

Sun.com was the the page of Sun Microsystems and was one of the first dot-com domain names to be awarded.

According to one of Oracle's developer bogs, the site will disappear on June 1.

Most of the content that was on BigAdmin, OpenSolaris.com, and some sections of SDN of the site has been migrated to the System Admin and Developer Community of the Oracle Technology Network (OTN) already.

Oracle's engineering team is apparently working porting the much used Hardware Compatibility List which was also on the site.

The content in blogs.sun.com will remain available. A blogging platform similar to blogs.sun.com is in the works at Oracle so that blogging can continue as before.

However one thing that will be killed off is the huge database of papers. Oracle said it does not generally archive out-of-date and unbranded papers. It plans to rescue a limited number of classics, but most of the old blueprints will disappear.

Some of this can be found on mirrors such as http://www.filibeto.org/sun/lib/blueprints/sun-blueprints-archive.html.

Sun com was registered four years after Scott McNealy, Andy Bechtolsheim, Bill Joy, and Vinod Kosla founded the outfit and was one of the first 100 dot-com domains. It went live 24 years ago.

Oracle bought Sun last year and for the last year has been killing off the Sun's corporate operations and online presence. It has also been losing control of Sun's Open Sauce projects.

Read more: http://www.techeye.net/software/oracle-kills-off-one-of-the-worlds-oldest-domain-names#ixzz1Gqal4Icl


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3.3.11

Oracle unveils latest version of Oracle GlassFish Server

Business software and hardware systems company Oracle (NASDAQ:ORCL) said yesterday that it has released Oracle GlassFish Server 3.1 and an update to the Java Platform, Enterprise Edition (Java EE) 6 software development kit distribution through the latest release of the Java EE 6 Reference Implementation.

The latest release offers new high availability features in the areas of load balancing, failover, state management and centralised administration.

Oracle GlassFish Server complements Oracle WebLogic Server 11g, which is designed to run the broader portfolio of Oracle Fusion Middleware 11g and large-scale enterprise applications.

Source: http://it.tmcnet.com


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27.2.11

The Consensus Opinion on Oracle: Slightly Bullish

Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) has a market cap of $170 billion and more than 370,000 customers in more than 145 countries. It will surprise exactly no one that the company attracts a lot of institutional and retail investor interest. What did surprise me, though, was that last year, it was the No. 13 most-owned stock by investment clubs, as measured by the folks at Better Investing. If retail investors were high on the stock, it got me to thinking: What's the consensus sentiment view on Oracle?

Turns out the view is slightly bullish. Let's have a look at a few of the key sentiment drivers.

1. Analyst opinion
Analysts love Oracle. Data from Capital IQ captures their collective feeling: Thirty-two analysts have either a "buy" or an "outperform" rating on the stock -- by far the majority sentiment. With nine neutral "holds" and a lone "sell," we'll classify analyst sentiment as bullish.

2. Insider buying
Next we'll look at insider buying and selling. Here, the picture isn't as rosy. Over the past year, Oracle insiders have sold $1.9 billion (that's billion, with a b) worth of their company stock. During the same time period, insiders bought $81,000 worth of the stock. (Data from Form4Oracle.)

Even though $1.89 billion of net insider selling is but a small sliver of Oracle's $171 billion market cap, and although insiders sell stock for a whole host of reasons -- to pay for a house or tuition, to diversify assets, and so forth -- it'd sure be nice to see less insider selling. It'd also be nice to see it balanced out by more insider buying. For purposes of this exercise, we'll classify insider buying/selling as bearish.

3. Guru buying
Next, we'll look at "guru" ownership of the stock, according to GuruFocus.

In the quarter ended Dec. 31, two investing gurus were buying Oracle shares: George Soros and Chris Davis. However, four gurus were reducing or eliminating their Oracle stakes in the quarter, among them John Hussman and Ruane Cunniff. In the previous quarter, six gurus were trading Oracle: three buyers, three sellers.

It's close, but the consensus action has been "sell," so we'll classify guru buying sentiment as bearish.

4. Retail-investor community sentiment
For retail-investor community sentiment, I turn to Motley Fool CAPS, our proprietary stock-rating system. CAPS generates ratings on a one- to five-star scale, with five stars as the highest ranking, an indication that the Fool community believes in a stock's future. That's mostly the case for Oracle: The stock has a four-star rating.

5. Short-sellers
Next we'll look at whether short-sellers are circling the stock. There are 25 million Oracle shares sold short, according to Capital IQ. As a percentage of shares outstanding, that's a short interest of 0.5%. That's not at all high, and so for determining sentiment, we'll classify the low short interest as bullish.

6. Does Buffett own it?
This is the "cherry on top" test, and in this case, it's a no: Berkshire Hathaway does not own shares of Oracle. That's no surprise, though, given Warren Buffett's famous aversion to technology stocks.

Adding it up
The consensus opinion on Oracle is "slightly bullish." Analysts love the stock, and the CAPS community believes in it. In another bullish sign, short sellers are staying away. But insiders have been selling in huge quantities, and gurus have been selling more than they've been buying. Berkshire's not a holder, either.

Of course, you can't base an investment philosophy on who likes or dislikes the stock you own, and even a consensus bullish opinion can sometimes be a scary thing. Quoting Buffett: "A simple rule dictates my buying: Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful."

The purpose of this series of articles isn't to make a definitive buy-or-sell call on Oracle. Rather, by looking at a stock's sentiment, the goal is to help you place your own opinion of it in a broader context.

Source: By Brian Richards @ www.fool.com


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5.10.09

HP or Oracle announces intention to acquire Brocade by Dec. 7?

The latest tech company to hit the M&A rumor mill is Brocade (BRCD), a manufacturer of data center equipment ranging from blade server modules to storage-area networking gear. Reports in the financial press say that the company has put itself up for sale, and prospective buyers include tech heavyweights Hewlett-Packard (HPQ) and Oracle (ORCL). However, the Wall Street Journal, citing "people familiar with the matter," said that "no deal is imminent."

Oracle has been on an acquisition spree recently, with deals involving Sun and HyperRoll. HP's acquisitions include EDS and Colubris.

Prediction: By December 7, 2009, either HP or Oracle announces its intention to acquire Brocade Communications Systems. The deal does not need to be accepted, approved, or closed by this date, but one of the companies involved must make an announcement or have the news confirmed in a major financial or technology news publication by Monday, December 7, 2009.

Source: http://www.thestandard.com


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15.7.09

Oracle Fixes Highly Exploitable Flaws

While Oracle's latest quarterly critical patch may fix fewer flaws than previous quarterly patches, today's release is notable for the number of flaws that can be exploited without credentials, according to Amichai Shulman, CTO of Imperva and a former member of the security center of the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF).

Two vulnerabilities rated a 10 on the CVSS scale, on which 10 is the highest possible risk, because they allowed an attack on the system without authentication. Being able to exploit a flaw without valid database credentials make these flaws extremely important. Those critical vulnerabilities are in the BEA JRockit application and in Oracle Secure Backup.

BEA JRockit is Oracle's Java technology, and the critical vulnerabilities affect the latest versions of the software, R27.6.3 and earlier (JDK/JRE 6, 5, 1.4.2). A user can exploit them to do damage without having the necessary credentials.

Oracle also issued patches for the following other BEA products: Oracle Complex Event Processing and Oracle WebLogic Server.

Oracle also issued two fixes for flaws in Oracle Secure Backup, one of which is a critical flaw rated a 10 on the CVSS. A user can exploit it to do damage without having the necessary credentials. The other is rated 9 because although it also allows a complete takeover of a PC, it requires valid credentials.

Oracle's most popular software, Oracle Database, received 10 fixes today. Some of the patches applied to the new 11g product. Oracle said that three of those fixes rate and can be exploited without a user name and password and one rates a 9 on the CVSS on Windows (but a 6.5 if Oracle is running on Unix or Linux). This flaw enables the complete takedown of a database on Windows and partial takedown on Unix or Linux.

Shulman said that the flaw was likely related to networking components, such as the Oracle Listener component, rather than to the core of the database itself. In April, Cisco released a proof of concept attack on the Oracle Database Listener designed to work on Windows because it attacked a specific DLL (define) file. The flaw that Cisco demonstrated has been fixed.
Lower rated fixes still pose risks

The two fixes issued to Oracle Application Server were rated a 5 out of 10, but both could be exploited without user credentials. Of eight new fixes to Oracle Applications Suite, five could be exploited without user credentials, but none were rated higher than 6. Two new fixes for Oracle Enterprise Manager Suite were not rated higher than 5.5 and were not exploitable without credentials.

Of three new patches for the PeopleSoft and JDEdwards Suite, one fixed a flaw that could be exploited without user credentials, but none was rated higher than 5.5.

One fix was issued for the Oracle Siebel Suite and although it could be exploited without user credentials, it was rated only 3.

But Shulman said that the low CVSS scores may understate the risk. "Using very simple tools like a text editor and a Telnet program (define), available on every PC, I can bring down a production database server," he said. "Oracle follows the CVSS scoring standard and these flaws score relatively low but in reality that's a pretty big security risk," he said.

Author: Alex Goldman @ www.internetnews.com


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