With the exception of a slight career detour in recent years, I pretty much worked for Sun and Oracle for my entire adult. The houses I bought, my wedding with my wife, all those diapers and baby expenses, my kids private schools....all from Sun and Oracle.
I had a great run there. Made enough money (and invested wisely enough) where, while not super rich or can retire in the Bahamas, I will never have to worry about money again assuming I don't get into crystal meth or crack. McNealy / Ellison treated me nice.
Not too worried about the financial future even without that wealth - I actually have the exact same skills that Oracle claims they can't find talent for, so I will get paid - but I've the got the Scarlett Letters of OCI-C that makes me untouchable to the OCI group. Basically, driven out by politics.
Larry takes his time to get into cloud, blames the guys building it instead of high level strategic failures. New guy wants the DB revenue, so kills OCI-C for OCI and wants to mold everything for himself. I'm just a foot soldier caught in the crossfire.
Oh well. Oracle is basically the Titanic, and I was graciously offered one of the early lifeboats.
Oracle revenues have been basically flat ($35 Billion in 2011, $39 Billions in 2018) during one of the biggest booms of our lifetime. No one thinks of Oracle for cloud, which is their big bet. What new company is going to use Taleo when you got Workday? Who the heck uses Oracle NoSQL when there are great, non-copycat alternatives? Do you know anyone who used Oracle Cloud outside of Oracle testing?
It's sad in a way. I was a loyal Oracle guy. I would fight for them, resist overtures from other companies because I really digged Oracle's culture and the friends and colleagues that I worked with. No, they weren't perfect, but it was a company that valued an employee's family and use to try to avoid layoffs. I actually took less money for the work-life balance and because they invested in their employees long-term. Heck, they gave me the time and money to get graduate degrees part-time. Alas, cause some guy wants "his guys" to be there, all that goodwill is thrown away.
S---s that Oracle just became a classic case of corporate politics and BS taking over employee satisfaction. Oh well. I know Oracle's going to throw ridiculous money up in Seattle to hire someone who has a lesser skillset than I. When Oracle loses their employees' loyalty, they have to make it up in ridiculous cash. I guess, in the end, the person who they hire, and myself, will end up richer - and Oracle will remain poorer.
I'll miss Oracle and Sun. But I consider myself pretty lucky to have been there.