T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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101.1 | A little bit of caustic commentary | CHECK::JANDERSON | | Thu Mar 24 1988 03:12 | 10 |
| Surely you can get the support that you require from Oracle!?
If you think thats being sarcastic- its meant to be.
A colleague of mine recently presenting Rdb futures to a senior
VP of a "major" account was interupted with a "time out" gesture.
The reason - this VP wanted Oracle futures and performance details!
As of this date Oracle Corporation are not even a CMP. This VP also
wanted to know why they were not one.
Some days are better than others.
I do hope that the hardware business is ours in this notes case
-at least today if not in the future with portable Oracle!!
|
101.2 | AIJ not supported | HSK01::HIRVONEN | | Thu Mar 24 1988 06:57 | 6 |
| I had same kind of questions with INGRES and ORACLE, as far as I
have heard, both of those products don't have AIJ-support in
VAXcluster-environment (ORACLE will have in release 6, INGRES ?).
Regards
Kari Hirvonen Digital Finland/SWAS
|
101.3 | This is too much! | DEBIT::FOLDEVI | | Fri Mar 25 1988 18:36 | 22 |
|
This is unbelievable!! A person in a group chartered to "support strategic
sales" actually wants to provide work-arounds for the pit-falls of our
MAIN competitor's product! And Rdb/VMS is declared a strategic product.
You've lost me. Maybe I'm too new at DEC, but this stuns and upsets me a
lot. These events are not isolated things, I've seen similar request
before.
I do understand that Oracle is for real, and that we have to live with it,
but to activly cover up product deficiencies is going too far. At least in
my (naive?) opinion.
Hopefully this is all due to lack of information as to what Rdb is and
will be, functionally and competitivly?
So, educate the customers about the pit-falls, and give them the best
work-around: Rdb and its relatives!
(Wow, I feel much better now after this BOHA - blowing off hot air! :-) )
Lars
|
101.4 | ORACLE: A double edge sword | TRCT02::NAISH | RDB4ME Paul @ 637-3352 | Sun Mar 27 1988 07:54 | 19 |
| Its all very nice to carry the RDB banner but the reality is that
a number of customers have decided on ORACLE. Here in Ontario Canada,
most of the Ministries (AKA Departments to our U.S. cousins) have
adopted ORACLE as their strategic product.
BUT you do have a point that we do not have to do their job for
them. Whenever I am asked to assit on a configuration involving
ORACLE, I get on the phone to my local ORACLE rep and get them to
do the leg work and more importantly ASSUME RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE
SIZE OF THE SYSTEM.
As to the origianl question, my ORACLE contacts admit that ORACLE
in a CLUSTER is very costly. The reason, I'm not sure, but I think
it mostly has to do with the fact they do not use the distributed
lock manager and have implemented their own scheme which substantially
increases I/O's.
Its ORACLEs problem, DBM (don't buy monkeys).
|
101.5 | The Defense Rests... | KOKO::DAVIS | | Tue Mar 29 1988 18:44 | 60 |
| I apparently, inadvertantly stumbled onto a religious issue. Please
allow me to clarify me position on this (and my loyalties if in
doubt).
For those of you who checked my intro you know that my background
is as an ORACLE OEM. Which is precisely why I would rather NOT
see ORACLE succeed in our accounts. After 3 years of being held
over the cliff (until we came up with enough money to temporarily
gain solid footing) with each major release of ORACLE, I believe
that while ORACLE is product is OK (yes just OK), ORACLE the company
is vicious. This viciousness is not reserved for OEMs. End users
have also been held for ransom. Ask any customer of ORACLE's who
has had the product from Version 4 or prior how much is has cost
them (above the maintenance fees) just to keep up with the latest
releases. Probably 2 to 5 times their original investment in ORACLE.
I also believe that it is "strategically" imperative that Digital
OWN the customers data (within a proprietary DBMS) to maintain account
control.
Now comes the "On-the-other-hand" part.
On the other hand, Customer Satisfaction is one of our major stated
goals and is critical to our current success and future prospects.
If the customer has made a Digital/ORACLE decision, after having
been presented with what we are convinced is the best solution (Rdb)
then it is still our responsibility to ensure the customer succeeds
with at least the Digital part of the solution. A failed project
doen't reflect well on any of the involved parties. While some
customers may be intelligent enough to recognize ORACLE as the culprit
I would not want to wager one of our larger customers on this hope.
In regards to having ORACLE Corp. take the lead in the data base
project success: While in principle I agree and in many cases would
make the same recommendation, it can hardly be denied that the
customers loyalties will lie with the vendor who participates most
visibly in their success. Our continued involvement provides us
with the necessary account control and minimizes the risk of ORACLE
successfully migrating our customer to another platform. In other
words if the customer must have ORACLE then we should remove or
minimize ORACLE Corp's involvement after the sale. This also positions
us well to replace ORACLE with the appropriate solution (Rdb) at
the first opportune time.
This particular customer is certainly aware of the availability
of ORACLE Corp to help them resolve their problems but felt that
Digital was the more capable provider. I personally would like to
foster this attitude rather than kill it.
Finally, I would like to solicit your input as to the best approaches
for successfully selling Rdb to corporate accounts who have already
standardized on ORACLE (or another DBMS vendor). This tends to be
a rather daunting obstacle to overcome and we can all benefit from
suggestions in this area.
The Defense Rests...
Sandy
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