Customers seem to respond well to ORCL autonomous cloud products (and not just DB) and they seeme to have real results that exceed on-premises performance.
Am I missing something, or does ORCL have some traction with this?
Customers seem to respond well to ORCL autonomous cloud products (and not just DB) and they seeme to have real results that exceed on-premises performance.
Am I missing something, or does ORCL have some traction with this?
Monday Keynote
Cloud Generation 2
The Second Generation Cloud is built for the enterprise to protect your critical data; secure from core to edge; easily move apps and data from on-premises. It is built for all enterprise workloads, is designed to run in the public cloud or at customer and is simple to upgrade. The Second Generation Cloud is the foundation for the autonomous database.
Wednesday Keynote
Fusion Cloud Applications—Secure and Extensible
Oracle Fusion Cloud Applications are built on a modern cloud platform with machine learning, making them easier to use, more secure and more extensible.
I thought fusion cloud apps were c-ap. Has something major changed there?
So the LE keynotes are summarized here
https://www.oracle.com/openworld/keynotes.html
What exactly is he going to be talking about?!?
Hard to relate to the announcements this year
OP as per Larry only 2 products are autonomous -db and dwh. Rest all were Marketing stunt. So your customers are happy using things that do not exist lol
OP : totally the opposite.
there has been a so small adoption (you can count real customers with one hand, where "real means customers at least evaluating going to production with the services) that LE himself has pushed out a mandatory action to stop calling everything "autonomous" and immediately correct all docs, presos, speeches, etc..., that are going to be presented in OOW.
huge work indeed, since everyone jumped on the "autonomous" bandwagon.
only DB (and only the two specific cloud services) can from now on be named "autonomus", nothing else. in LE mind, this should focus the interest of the cusotmers, but I don't think this was the real problem here.......
Lots of talk very few results. Based on Larry’s past performance on “cloud” product launches.....the time from when the product is launched to when it’s actually ready for real world use by enterprise customers is 2-3 years.