T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
456.1 | All with way with Rdb! (if only it rhymed!) | NOVA::COUGHLAN | DBS Product Management | Fri Oct 13 1989 20:08 | 14 |
| Hmm... we here in DBS PM-land don't see that book... we get the US
Systems Price List (latest is as of October 2, 1989). There are no
Oracle products listed there.
If I remember correctly, the PC group did a Digital Distributed
Software Agreement for ORACLE-PC on the (then) VAXmate and (probably
now) DECsystem 2xx systems. I can't recall whether the Ultrix group
did a similar deal for DDS ORACLE on ULTRIX systems. We fought both,
to no avail (the winning argument being "My business needs it, I don't
care if it hurts yours"). Tell me what the specific products being
offered are, and I'll point you towards a likely DRI (or somebody who
will know who the DRI is). You can then make a "This hurts me"
statement direct, which carries more weight than a "They said it hurts
them" statement from me.
|
456.2 | Need I say more? | UTEP::LANGSTON | Ask me about Rdb | Fri Oct 13 1989 21:20 | 33 |
| Re: .1
� Tell me what the specific products being
� offered are, and I'll point you towards a likely DRI (or somebody who
� will know who the DRI is). You can then make a "This hurts me"
� statement direct, which carries more weight than a "They said it hurts
� them" statement from me.
The "VAX Software Price Book" lists the following ORACLE products:
Easy*SQL This product supplies capabilities similar to
and is a competitor with VAX TEAMDATA and VAX RALLY.
ORACLE PRO*C, PRO*COBOL and PRO*FORTRAN directly compete with
our compilable SQL and RDO, our SQL preprocessors for
COBOL, FORTRAN and C, and our dynamic SQL
SQL*Plus, SQL*Calc, SQL*Forms and SQL*Menu are direct
competitors of VAX RALLY and VAX TEAMDATA.
SQL*Net, SQL*Net Asynch Protocol and SQL*Net DECnet Protocol
combine - in various ways, I'm guessing - to directly
compete with our DEClink products (VAXlink and VIDA), and
VAX SQL/Services and compete in our "desktop to datacenter"
space
and finally, they all work with and can't work without
ORACLE RDBMS which is, by some measures, the most prevalent
(or at least it was and still is neck-and-neck) relational
database management system on VAX/VMS and is a direct
competitor to the second most prevalent relational dbms,
VAX Rdb/VMS (our product ;-) ).
|
456.3 | It's a Big Company | CLYPPR::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Sat Oct 14 1989 00:29 | 4 |
| By the way, we also now sell Oracle/Macintosh in DECdirect just like PC
Oracle.
---- Michael Booth
|
456.4 | More details needed... | SQLRUS::COUGHLAN | DBS Product Management | Mon Oct 16 1989 18:10 | 17 |
| � The "VAX Software Price Book" lists the following ORACLE products:
� Easy*SQL
� ORACLE PRO*C, PRO*COBOL and PRO*FORTRAN
� SQL*Plus, SQL*Calc, SQL*Forms and SQL*Menu
� SQL*Net, SQL*Net Asynch Protocol and SQL*Net DECnet Protocol
� ORACLE RDBMS
Q numbers? SPD Numbers? ULTRIX, VMS, PC, (Macintosh, as Mike points
out)?
|
456.5 | Here's the Oracle/PC | CLYPPR::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Mon Oct 16 1989 21:49 | 8 |
| Here's one:
Professional Oracle (PC) Q6VGL-CZ
Oracle Network Station Q6VGN-CZ
I'll get Mac when I can.
---- Michael Booth
|
456.6 | Rdb! Rdb! Rdb! Rdb! Rdb! | SRFSUP::LANGSTON | Ask me about RALLY | Tue Oct 17 1989 05:52 | 58 |
| The "VAX Software Price Book" lists the following ORACLE products:
� Easy*SQL This product supplies capabilities similar to
� and is a competitor with VAX TEAMDATA and VAX RALLY.
QB-VISA*-T5
QB-VISA*-TM
� ORACLE PRO*C, PRO*COBOL and PRO*FORTRAN directly compete with
� our compilable SQL and RDO, our SQL preprocessors for
� COBOL, FORTRAN and C, and our dynamic SQL
QB-VIYA*-T5
QB-VIYA*-TM
QB-VJ1A*-T5
QB-VJ1A*-TM
QB-VIZA*-T5
QB-VIZA*-TM
� SQL*Plus, SQL*Calc, SQL*Forms and SQL*Menu are direct
� competitors of VAX RALLY and VAX TEAMDATA.
QB-VNFA*-T5
QB-VNFA*-TM
QB-VITA*-T5
QB-VITA*-TM
QB-VIRA*-T5
QB-VIRA*-TM
QB-VJ2A*-T5
QB-VJ2A*-TM
� SQL*Net, SQL*Net Asynch Protocol and SQL*Net DECnet Protocol
� combine - in various ways, I'm guessing - to directly
� compete with our DEClink products (VAXlink and VIDA), and
� VAX SQL/Services and compete in our "desktop to datacenter"
� space
QB-VIUA*-T5
QB-VIUA*-TM
QB-VIVA*-T5
QB-VIVA*-TM
QB-VIWA*-T5
QB-VIWA*-TM
�and finally, they all work with and can't work without
� ORACLE RDBMS which is, by some measures, the most prevalent
� (or at least it was and still is neck-and-neck) relational
� database management system on VAX/VMS and is a direct
� competitor to the second most prevalent relational dbms,
� VAX Rdb/VMS (our product ;-) ).
QB-VIQA*-T5
QB-VIQA*-TM
...and one more that I, in my righteous fervor, missed is ORACLE
SQL*NET TCP/IP Protocol which makes the other stuff work on TCP/IP
networks and, thereby, promotes their products. (for good measure)
QB-VIXA*-T5
QB-VIXA*-TM
|
456.7 | not new news | NUTMEG::SILVERBERG | | Tue Oct 17 1989 13:21 | 7 |
| This is the result of the DDS agreements signed with ORACLE and
many of the other 3rd party database vendors that expand our
offerings for customers who want to purchase those products
thru a single purchasing entity....Digital.
Mark
|
456.8 | How many sales ? | MAIL::DUNCANG | Gerry Duncan @KCO | Tue Oct 17 1989 14:25 | 9 |
| We are aware of the intent of the "single purchasing entity" logic.
However, there are other ways to achieve the same result.
How many times have the Oralce products been included in a "single
purchasing entity" sale ?? How many !!
Better yet, how many times have these Oracle products been sold by
Digital in ANY type of sale ??
|
456.9 | Not Again? | SQLRUS::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Tue Oct 17 1989 16:18 | 6 |
| Suppose a customer wants to buy an HP or IBM box. Will we also sell him
that for his convenience?
Or are we saying that "that's different, hardware is important."
---- Michael Booth
|
456.10 | there's a new world out there | NUTMEG::SILVERBERG | | Wed Oct 18 1989 13:57 | 13 |
| re.8 I suspect the folks who manage the DDS agreements will have
their sales information, and the Enterprise Integration Services
folks or whoever looks after all our intergration/prime contracting
or Special Sales programs will have their program info.
re.9 Most of our enterprise integration competition is learning
how to sell DEC boxes for customers who want the integration
service, so I suspect we will learn how to handle HP or IBM or
other boxes to help solve customer problems if we really mean to
be in that business in the long run.
Mark
|
456.11 | | AKOV12::HAGGERTY | GIA Software Services | Fri Oct 20 1989 22:27 | 4 |
| On a somewhat related note, would any of the previous authors care to
comment on the results at the KO woods meeting yesterday, where this
very issue was discussed?
|
456.12 | Maybe we can salvage something !!! | SNO78C::BELAKHOV | Oh, my god, it's full of stars. | Tue Oct 24 1989 02:47 | 13 |
| Bruce,
To at least salvage something from this situation, would you mind
(if you have the time) putting the prices for the ORACLE products
in this note.
Having ORACLE complete prices and maintenance fees would be a great
help in competitive situations and in convincing sales people that
in most cases the customer can not afford both ORACLE and a decent
size VAX to run it on.
Thanks,
Michael
|
456.13 | Arrogant Pricing | CWBNGA::LANGSTON | Ask me about RALLY | Tue Oct 24 1989 21:12 | 39 |
| The prices for ORACLE products listed in the July 18, 1989 "VAX
Software Price Book" (EE-C0206-38) are
* |
|
___________________________________________________________
Easy*SQL 2710 10346 15519 25618 30791
PRO*C 2032 7759 11639 19214 23093
PRO*FORTRAN
PRO*COBOL
RDBMS 13548 51729 77594 128092 153956
SQL*Forms 3387 12932 19398 32023 38489
SQL*Plus 2710 10346 15519 25618 30791
SQL*Menu 2032 7759 11639 19214 23093
SQL*Net Async
SQL*Net DECnet
*The prices are in U.S. dollars, are for the U.S. only
and are for (left to right) VAXstation 3100/3200/3520/3540/8000,
MVII/750/8200/8250, 780/785/8300/8350, 8600/8650/8550/8700/8810,
6240/6340/6350/8800/8820.
There are prices in the book for other VAXes; you can interpolate and
be close. No prices were given for bigger VAXes (6000-4XX), but I
seem to recall hearing that the RDBMS is ~$198K for a 6000-460. I
don't know if they have the equivalent of our "run-time" license, but
I'm sure it's not available for the "nominal" $755 (for media and
documentation) we charge for Runtime Rdb.
They also charge exorbitantly (30%-40% of license fees) for maintenance
contracts.
-b
|
456.14 | VMS or Ultrix? | UBEAUT::CLEARY | A deviant having fun..." | Thu Oct 26 1989 12:40 | 3 |
| Are the prices in .13 for VMS or for Ultrix ?
-mark
|
456.15 | We have to WALK THE WALK | CISM::MORAN | When Money Speaks The Truth is? | Thu Oct 26 1989 20:57 | 13 |
| Re .9 SQLRUS::BOOTH
In answer to your question, suppose a customer wants to buy HP or
IBM box. Will we also sell him that for his convience?
We had better be prepared to say yes to that question or get out
of the System Integration business. As a matter of fact we better
be able to say yes to other vendors databases as well!
In the UK we our servicing my clients IBM Mainframe & foreign PC's.
What's the difference? If we want to be perceive as being able
to become strategically important to our customers we MUST give
them what they want. Even if it is not ours.
|
456.16 | Still Wrong | CLYPPR::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Thu Oct 26 1989 21:09 | 27 |
| Giving the customer what he wants is NOT SELLING. It is being an
order-taker. If that is your grand vision for Digital, the the future
is very bleak. That dictates a company that is a giant dealer, not a
leader.
The main thrust of this argument is quite simple. It is short term vs.
long-term. The smartest and easiest thing to do to get short-term sales
is to sell the box and damn the software. That is also the most
horrific long-term strategy. Since software is the differentiator, it
means the customer has nothing invested in Digital except the box.
Digital has virtually nothing invested in the customer either. The real
problem with this strategy is that it rests on constantly acquiring new
accounts. It is software and applications that create loyalty. Hardware
is now simply an enabling technology.
If you want us to be like Sun or Appolo, the sell the box at all costs.
If you want us to be like IBM, we will have to take the long-term view.
Yes, that requires richer software. That also requires selling rather
than order-taking.
As a final point, we do dpend on implementors to recommend our
hardware/software. However, in a world where giving the customer
"whatever he asks for", why make any products at all. Why not be a
reseller only. Then all you have to do is take the order. All the risks
and the vision are assumed by the manufacturers.
---- Michael Booth
|
456.17 | Your the Oracle :') | CISM::MORAN | When Money Speaks The Truth is? | Thu Oct 26 1989 21:39 | 18 |
| Re: -1
I guess your definition of giving the customer what he wants is
not my definition. What I meant by the word WANT was as follows:
1- Customer WANTS a solution to their mobile billing problems
2 - Customer WANTS to reduce inventory turns
3 - Customer WANTS to reduce the number of General Ledgers in their
portfolio
Your absolutely right when you say that's not selling. Its alot
more than that...but it's not order taking.
If Digital is not perceived to be able to solve those problems then
our margins will be under significant pressure long term. We will
have to SELL a lot harder. As for visions......
|
456.18 | And so it goes. | SRFSUP::LANGSTON | Rdb is *the* Relational db for the VAX | Fri Mar 09 1990 02:32 | 8 |
| The new price book is out, dated February 7.
The Oracle stuff is all still in there.
Some INGRES stuff, too, though it's mostly either "Rdb applications"
or for ULTRIX.
-b
|