T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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341.1 | MY policy | KYOA::HANSON | The Youngest Curmudgeon! | Tue May 02 1989 21:55 | 25 |
|
Randy,
Have you seen 335.*? There's ORACLE stuff in there. Also scattered
throughout the conference, I'm sure.
Personally? ORACLE is a royal pain-in-my-A$$!!! I'm always bombarded
by customers, prospects, and other interested parties going "What does
Digital offer in the way of 4GL or relational databases (dduuhhh!), I
keep hearing about this ORACLE outfit, and they say..."
I sigh heavily and ask for a whiteboard and a few minutes of their
time.
Wanna know the real rub? I'm in Volume. I've gotta support one
of Digital's oldest OEM's. Guess what product they use to write
their applications? Yup.
I'm going to hold off there. Sometimes I just get so discouraged
when I realize what we're up against. To answer your question,
though, "MY official" position is that I will not work with them,
I'll not work for them, I won't recommend them, and I'll advise
against going with them. Regardless.
BH
|
341.2 | Explain? | VIA::CARIGNAN | Marc Carignan | Wed May 03 1989 18:34 | 7 |
| Why this hostility towards Oracle? Please state situation, examples, facts,
etc. We got the 'feelings' part, but why this tension? I know little about
the Oracle-DEC Rdb climate...please fill me in.
Thanks
Marc
|
341.3 | We're a bit holier than thouem. | KYOA::HANSON | The Youngest Curmudgeon! | Wed May 03 1989 19:07 | 76 |
|
.If Hungry .and. Just_Before_Lunch then
Set Flame/On
.else
Set Burner/Simmer
Well, first-off, I would hope that I'm not entirely alone in my
feelings, and would seriously doubt that I am. And there are several
reasons for feeling "tension", depending on the areas in which you
put the most emphasis.
The # of Licenses angle: There is not doubt, at least in this Area,
that O has been rather effective at selling their product, not
only to "new" database users, but into the existing VAX installed
base as well. Call it slick marketing, call it a "weak" Rdb/VMS
message; Those are the facts. They ARE the competition - they
are not an OEM, a DEC distributor, or any other type of cooperative
outfit.
The Marketing angle: I don't know about you, but I have a hard
time *liking* any company that "lies" as they do. 256 TPS?
Suuurrrrre. And fairies will dance on the lawn at sunrise!
"Biggest PC market share?" etc. etc. Refer to MB's presentation
'Winning the Database' in order to get insight into these myths.
Larry Ellison, in an article that I've recently typed into this
conference, is, from all indications, an extremely arrogant person,
and much as KO's influence is felt throughout Digital and is
manifested in DECculture, so have I found that Ellison's influence
affects O's field people, both marketing and technical. Part
of being "The Youngest Curmudgeon" is not taking well to arrogance
and hippocracy. Succinctly, I don't like the way they do business.
My attitude is that with O's marketing hype, they're trying to
fool the public by presenting an overly inflated impression of
the product, and yet the public is buying it! That means that
they're good liars, I guess. No, I don't like that at all.
Sure, we, I suppose, tried to optimize the he** out of our bench-
marks for the best numbers, but at least we present a reasonable
set of numbers... something approaching an attainable reality.
The Mom & Apple Pie angle: I don't like O in the way that they
approach VAX from an architectural standpoint. Cluster support?
Interoperability with other products? No. Not there, at least
not yet.
One of the biggest selling features of the Digital product set
is VIA - it gives you *options*. If you don't like Cobol, code
C. If you don't like 3GL, code with a 4GL... AS LONG AS IT IS
DSRI COMPLIANT. If I were a customer, I'd go Rdb simply because
it leaves many options open for development tools, end user aids,
distributed environments, interfaces into yet-to-be-developed
products and all that other jazz. With DECwindows, CDA, and some
of the other announcements, the argument just keeps getting
stronger every day.
But perhaps we should give credit where credit is due: Oracle must
have a decent product, or they would have fallen long ago. I don't
put any stock in their marketing style or hype - Heck, IBM is known
for being the best marketeers, and yet we all know that they don't
really have the product in the midrange. Yet they still sell.
Why the tension? Why the animosity?
Because I advocate V.I.A. Because I think Rdb is a product that
can more than hold it's own in the marketplace. Because I don't
like arrogant, egotistical liars - or the philosophy that that's
the way to do business. (Maybe I should cross-post this to
QUARK::HUMAN_RELATIONS?)
So why should I work WITH them? I'd much rather walk away from
an account set on Oracle than bother trying to rescue the low-
margin hardware-only sale.
Bob
|
341.4 | ORACLE is diverging from VAX/VMS | SNOC01::ANDERSONK | The Unbearable Lightness of Being | Fri May 05 1989 08:16 | 44 |
|
Perhaps, the company that does the best thing for its customers,
is the one that has the best chance of being successful. And that
is what Digital is all about (I've only been here 7+ years, so maybe
I've missed something...)
We used to to say that whoever 'owned' the network would 'own' the
customer and there is some 'truth' in that. The network is the
communication carrier for information, data etc.. But it is not
enough. DIGITAL will fail if we just rely on DECnet and OSI, and VAX
boxes to stay alive....
IBM figured out a few years ago (and we recognised it recently)
that whoever owns the desktop interface then owns a substantial
part of the customer also. We now have a good opportunity in this
space, but it is not enough to provide solutions for many customers
unless you can tie in the database and the information mgmt.
Inbetween, you can postulate that whoever 'owns' the management
and organisation of information, then owns the layer between the
network and the user (desktop) interface. We now offer functionality
in many areas of information mgmt that is superior.
Ideally, we need to excel constantly (ie innovate all the time)
in these three areas. Too many times, a customer rates one of these
three (network, dbms, desktop) as more important than the other
two and so is prepared to change the other two to suit the important
one. If we provide the best in all three, then we have an opportunity
to stay alive and grow - otherwise we are a fat duck waiting for
other vendors like Oracle to take the middle and turn the rest.
Own the database and you can change the desktop and h/w backbone...and
Oracle doesnt mind who gets hurt. It happens all the time.
Now, ORACLE have admitted that they would like to have their own
machine out in few years - so we assume NOW that their long term
support is not for any DIGITAL environment at all. Hence if we give
Oracle business, we may be cutting ourselves out of the future
partnerships with our customers.
Our philosophies are different in so many areas... we believe that
as a result, our systems are going to show this difference in
ease-of-use, power, and all the other things that help protect the
customers investment now and in the future.
|
341.5 | Over my cpu bound body ... | MAIL::DUNCANG | Gerry Duncan @KCO | Fri May 05 1989 17:41 | 144 |
| I would like to add my experiences with Oracle covering several
customers.
==> At one customer Oracle was chosen because of a mixed environment
(Bull and DEC). I can accept that. However, during the sales cycle
and benchmarking Oracle:
- Told the customer what a dog the 88xx line was and how Oracle
sent back their 88xx systems for 62xx systems. This
was a really nice touch since we were sitting in the
LAX benchmark center watching the 8820 chug along
CPU bound. (Customer did decide on his own to buy
8840, however.)
- Never provided cluster references "because we don't have to
... we're (Oracle) locked in"
- Offered to run Sequent benchmarks when VAX was not meeting
throughput requirements
- Never supplied tuning and design expertise ... only pre-sales
support for our V6 benchmarks and they had no V6 training
- Promised to provide technical support to help DEC but when
we called for help they didn't have any people "but
we're trying to hire some"
- Went to the customer and told them Oracle V6 WOULD NOT cluster
and then "dropped by" our office to tell us "... oh
by the way, we told the customer ...". (This destroyed
our cluster growth strategy.) Then the next day they
called back and said they were wrong ... V6 WILL support
clusters. A month later in LAX, V6 didn't come up at
all in the cluster so the sales rep and his SFO manager
had been jerking us around all the time.
- During our discussions with Oracle about performance in clusters
and in SMP machines, Oracle said "all performance problems
in clusters are caused by VMS lock manager". Given
the fact that the customer knew nothing about VMS, it
was very difficult to overcome this negative comment.
- The only thing that saved this business for us was the fact
that the customer revised his performance numbers and
the 8840 NON CLUSTERED would handle his work load for
the next 18 months AND we delivered an Aquarius PID
the week before the decision was made.
- At another customer, Rdb was selected for a project. Oracle went
to the customer and told them that Rdb was slow (V2.3), didn't
match SQL standard, and was a bad decision. Oracle was adopted
as the "standard". Several months later, our consultants were
hired to tune their system (a VAXcluster) since Oracle performance
was very bad. Later the customer decided to run Oracle on one
node only and to have a manual .COM file database failover.
At another location for this same customer, FOCUS has been called
in to look at replacing Oracle's forms since performance is
so bad. FOCUS is trying to get the customer to consider Rdb
as the backend ... jury is still out.
- At another account we've got a need to connect to DB2. Our solution,
based on ALL-IN-1 is very clean. Oracle arrived and the customer
wanted us to describe how Oracle would integrate to A1 because
they perceived Oracle had better connectivity to DB2. After
we exposed the drawbacks using Interlink, SQL*connect, poor
integration with A1, Oracle told the customer the reason they
haven't used our SNA gateway is because it is such a dog. This
made the customer feel good since they recently purchased two
of our gateways.
At this account, Oracle also told the customer how they could
connect PS/2 DIRECTLY to DB2 (without a VAX). So, working with
them in a mixed IBM/VAX environment is very dangerous. It looks
like we may get this business since VTX and A1 are in much need,
but the database work may go Oracle's way.
A couple of days ago the Oracle sales rep called our sales rep
and wanted to trade leads and work together .... gag me with
and index !!!
- At another customer, they have purchased an application which
requires Oracle. Because of licensing fees, they can only afford
run the application on one node of their six node cluster and
can only afford 8-5 support.
In addition, they are looking at cheap clones to do Oracle
development instead of workstations. Because the are engineering
and manufacturing, we've been trying for a long time to move
them to VAXstations. Looks like this may be more difficult
now.
- Just this morning, a sales rep asked my about Oracle's financials
and set up a meeting. When I objected to working with Oracle,
he said, "... look ... if this sells VAXs ..." .... so here
we go again.
==> I don't like their way of doing business either. Things I've
heard them say/do:
- the reason Oracle V6 is late is because they have so many
ports to support.
- they are switching to UNIX workstations (from VMS) because
it's a better development environment
- we (Oracle) don't care what system you buy (IBM, DEC, etc)
and only want to help the customer manage data
- we plan to support VAXclusters and are trying to decide if
we should write our own cluster lock manager
- customer and DEC asked for 6 weeks for SQL*connect and A1
integration. Oracle played the "we're trying" bit AND NEVER
did deliver the information.
These are just a few of the continuing insults and crap we have
to deal with everytime we "partner" with Oracle. Just to make
matters worse, look at this Email I got from a workstation sales
rep:
From: KCDEMO::FARM::ANDERSONB 28-APR-1989 10:41
To: kcdemo::duncan
Subj: ORACLE on DS3100
FYI
<<< HARBOR::SHPLOG$DUA2:[NOTES$LIBRARY]WS_COMPETITIVE_FORUM.NOTE;2 >>>
================================================================================
Note 653.3 SHIPPING PMAX Applications 3 of 3
JULIET::GRANT_GA "Live free or WISH you had." 16 lines 21-APR-1989 20:34
-< ORACLE from ORACLE >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Well, sort of. If your opportunity is big enough, ORACLE is shipping today.
Demo copies available. Are in the process of porting their CASE stuff.
Vendor name: ORACLE
Application name: ORACLE
Type of application: database
Availability date: demo NOW shipping semi-now
Plaforms this product runs on(including competitors): you name it.
Contact(where possible): Deepak Puri 415-598-7543
This guy is goaled SOLELY on Ultrix sales of ORACLE. Will be providing 30+
references. Seems very enthusiastic.
--gerry
|
341.6 | Competition | QUILL::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Mon May 08 1989 16:34 | 13 |
| The difference is philosphy. Oracle wants to control accounts via their
software. That is, total dependency on Oracle software no matter what
hardware you choose. That is diametrically opposed to Digital's
philosphy.
Consequently, we are direct competitors.
Also, Oracle is developing their own hardware. They will then be a
general computing vendor just like Digital.
The question is, how much do you "like" any of our competitors?
---- Michael Booth
|
341.7 | | BOSTON::SWIST | Jim Swist BXO 224-1699 | Mon May 08 1989 21:55 | 6 |
| Oracle is simply on the leading edge of what the computer industry is
heading for. As more and more computers need to be sold to a
(proportionally) diminishing pool of technical people to evaluate them,
hype, pizazz, lies, and all the other tricks of the automobile and
stereo showrooms are starting to become commonplace in what used
to be a professionals-selling-to-professionals game.
|
341.8 | I like MIS | QUILL::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Tue May 09 1989 20:56 | 10 |
| I have not found that technical people do an appreciably better job
selecting than business people who understand their corporate goals and
how software can help them attain that goal.
Sybase and Ingres have been very successful "hooking" the technical
"professional" on their technical goodies.
I trust the MIS types far more than the techies.
---- Michael Booth
|
341.9 | intollerable | IND::SANTIAGO | VMS and U___, perrrfect together | Sat May 13 1989 06:22 | 11 |
| re: .2
<flame_on>(magma_red)
A bunch of low-life, half-breed, maggot breathing pond scum who
don't have the decency or chutzpah to service an already sold customer,
let alone return phone calls. Companies who foster such negatism
and out and out lies should be held under water until their last air
bubble is popped. Nothing less.
<flame_off>
|
341.10 | Do I detect a hint of hatred? | KYOA::HANSON | The Youngest Curmudgeon! | Mon May 15 1989 16:15 | 20 |
|
>> <flame_on>(magma_red)
>>
>> A bunch of low-life, half-breed, maggot breathing pond scum who
>> don't have the decency or chutzpah to service an already sold customer,
>> let alone return phone calls. Companies who foster such negatism
>> and out and out lies should be held under water until their last air
>> bubble is popped. Nothing less.
>>
>> <flame_off>
Gee, Carlos, have you ever considered primal scream therapy? 8^o
You are, of course, referring to Oracle, no? Why don't you tell
us about the experiences you've had that lead you to looking for
a trough of water.
'Course, I always thought a 400 Volt Taser might be more appropriate.
Bob
|
341.11 | we do it to ourselves | JENNA::SANTIAGO | VMS and U___, perrrfect together | Thu May 18 1989 19:46 | 6 |
| case in point;
the new case PID presentation doesn't mention SQL services (i believed
to be available under ultrix)! but guess who is
/los
|
341.12 | Bad Ethics and Bad Business | COOKIE::BERENSON | VAX Rdb/VMS Veteran | Thu May 25 1989 19:08 | 13 |
| Somewhere in this notes conference, maybe multiple places, I've
summarized the problem with ORACLE as being that their ethical standards
are not up to the same level as Digitals. I've heard of MANY bad
experiences with them, but not having direct involvement in them I won't
report details. What makes the situation with ORACLE so noticeable is
that the other database competitors approximate Digital's ethical position.
In terms of concrete reasons to avoid ORACLE, the main one is the
previously mentioned account control problem. ORACLE intentionally
tries to turn customers into multi-vendor (read that as many-vendor)
shops. The more vendors, the more entrenched is ORACLE. So, a salesrep
who gets in bed to get THIS VAX sale stands a good chance of losing the
NEXT VAX sale to HP, and the following one to SUN, and then one to IBM, etc.
|
341.13 | or to oracle themselves | BRILLO::BIRCH | Peter Birch, DTN 842-3297 | Fri May 26 1989 12:32 | 7 |
| In the future, since Oracle have announced the intention to badge
engineer hardware, probably Sequent, the next sale will probably
be lost to Oracle themselves. Moreover, anywhere Oracle currently
has a foothold will be in danger of their recommending migration
to their own kit.
PDB
|