11.7.07

Oracle BI Standard Edition for SMEs

Oracle is bringing business intelligence to the masses with Oracle BI Standard Edition One aimed at SMEs and departmental users.

Oracle did the same with its flagship database to produce a cut-down version called Oracle 10g Standard Edition One, which this lies at the heart of the new BI offering and includes tools for creating dashboards, ad hoc reporting and publishing. The BI SE One software costs $1,000 for each user, minimum five, maximum 50.

Author: Geoff Nairn


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10.7.07

New Supercomputer-Class Oracle Accelerator Kit From Texas Memory Systems

Texas Memory Systems delivers plug-and-play Oracle acceleration by bundling QLogic switches and host channel adapters with RamSan solid state disks...

Houston, Texas, USA, July 9, 2007 -- Texas Memory Systems, maker of the World’s Fastest Storage®, today announced a new Oracle Accelerator Kit – a product bundle designed to make it easier to accelerate Oracle database performance using supercomputer-class hardware. The Oracle Accelerator Kit includes Texas Memory Systems’ RamSan solid state disks, QLogic switches and QLogic host channel adaptors (HCAs) designed for InfiniBand-based Oracle grid computing environments.

The Texas Memory Systems Oracle Accelerator Kit can accelerate Oracle databases up to 2500%. Applications accelerated by solid state disks can support more concurrent users, more simultaneous transactions and demand less technical support. By using a pre-configured solution bundle, organizations benefit from extreme database performance and productivity gains, yet maintain an infrastructure that is scalable and easy to manage. The kits ensure fast and easy installation with assured compatibility of the components, all of which have been tested and certified by QLogic and Texas Memory Systems.“The need for database performance continues to grow,” said Dr. Klaus Heihoff, managing director of HMK Computer Technologies GmbH. “Being able to offer a certified and tested bundle that combines Texas Memory Systems’ super-fast SSD with QLogic’s InfiniBand HCAs and switches will make it much easier to solve customers’ performance challenges. Having Texas Memory Systems stand behind the complete offering eliminates any guesswork associated with moving to InfiniBand.”

“We are delighted that Texas Memory Systems has chosen QLogic products to build their InfiniBand Oracle Accelerator Kits,” said Frank Berry, vice president of corporate marketing, QLogic Corporation. “The RamSan SSD and QLogic InfiniBand HCAs and Switches are a powerful combination for achieving extreme application performance without sacrificing reliability, scalability or value. With the pre-certified InfiniBand Oracle Accelerator Kits, it is very easy for users to upgrade their data centers to address I/O performance bottlenecks.”

Texas Memory Systems’ Oracle Accelerator Kit is immediately available in three configurations, designed to meet the needs of small, medium or enterprise customers.

The Small Business Kit combines a Texas Memory Systems’ 32GB RamSan-300 SSD with a QLogic 9024 switch and two QLogic 4x InfiniPath HCAs.

The Medium Business Kit offers the Texas Memory Systems’ RamSan-400 with 64 to 128GB of capacity along with the QLogic 9024 switch and two QLogic 4x InfiniPath HCAs.

The Enterprise Business Kit is comprised of two Texas Memory Systems’ 128GB RamSan-400s, two QLogic 9024 switches and four QLogic 4x InfiniPath HCAs.

Source: www.itbsoftware.com


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9.7.07

Google lures Oracle vet for Lenoir center

(News & Observer, The (Raleigh, NC) (KRT) Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge) Jul. 7--Google has hired a veteran of Oracle to manage the $600 million data center the company is building in Lenoir and start hiring for the first round of positions.

The facility is one of five the California company has announced in the past year, including one in South Carolina.

Tom Jacobik, 41, will oversee functions ranging from construction and hiring to hardware installation and day-to-day support once operations get under way in December.

"Tom has created a name for himself as an IT problem solver and leader," Andy Johnson, Google's East Coast regional manager, said in a statement. "This appointment is crucial to the success of the data center."

Google, which operates the world's largest Internet search engine, needs the server farm to store copious amounts of data such as pictures, video and other media moving on the Internet. For Internet users, the extra capacity will ensure all searches run smoothly and dependably, according to the company.

Jacobik, who started this week, was reached by phone in Atlanta, where he is training for the new job.

"The opportunity to build out a data center for a company like Google was way too much to turn down," Jacobik said. He plans to move his wife and seven children to Lenoir this year from Austin, Texas, where he was technical operations director for Oracle.

Jacobik has also worked for Cisco Systems and was chief information officer on special missions for the U.S. Air Force, where he managed the maintenance of communication systems and oversaw more than 300 people.

The new Google executive will begin posting positions for the Lenoir center in August and start hiring in December for 75 to 125 workers. Google promised to create 210 jobs in Lenoir within four years in exchange for up to $260 million in state and local tax breaks over 30 years.

Positions will include systems administrators, hardware managers, electricians and ventilation and air-conditioning experts -- these are needed to keep the facility cool amid hundreds, possibly thousands of hot-running servers. The new jobs will pay an average of $48,300 annually, nearly twice the Caldwell County average, according to state employment data.

"If growth continues, we will have capacity at our sites for further expansion," said Google spokesman Matt Dunne. That would be beyond the 210 workers.

While the first of two construction phases isn't scheduled to finish until mid-2008, the company will be able to erect work stations starting in December. "We're taking a good look at local talent because it's cost-effective in terms of not having to move people around and because it's the right thing to do," Jacobik said.

He could not say how many of the new workers will come from Lenoir or surrounding Caldwell County, which is about 200 miles west of Raleigh.

Sue Land, who manages the Employment Security Commission office in Lenoir, said Google is on schedule for building and hiring. She said she met Jacobik at a chamber event in Lenoir and discussed plans to employ as many local workers as possible.

To see more of The News & Observer, or to subscribe to the newspaper, go to http://www.newsobserver.com.


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