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 Oracle said it does not generally archive out-of-date and unbranded papers.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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