T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
700.1 | Is O more expensive on VAX? | IJSAPL::OLTHOF | Henny Olthof @UTO 838-2021 | Wed Aug 01 1990 09:33 | 11 |
| Michael,
From your note I understand that prices went up on all platforms by
the same order of magnitude (right?). Would it still be fair to say
that O is priced higher on VAX than on other HW (HP, Sequent) in the
same performance class?
Thanks,
Henny
|
700.2 | Right | POBOX::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Wed Aug 01 1990 16:53 | 17 |
| Oracle prices are based on the price of the underlying CPU.
Consequently, Oracle is more expensive on VAX and other proprietary
systems than on comparably powered Unix systems.
As an example, the "top of the line" prices are:
HP-UX, model 9000/855s - $103,000
HP-MPE/XL model 960/200- $193,000
IBM Powerstations (Models 320, 520, 530, 730) > 64 users - $79,000
Pyramid & Sequent > 256 users - $174,000
Sun 3 & 4 Workstations, Data General Aviion > 128 users - $141,000
Digital RISC DECsystem 5820 - $79,000
Digital VMS 9000-440 $224,000
IBM 3090-600J - $281,000
---- Michael Booth
|
700.3 | UNISYS info requested | BALDIE::GREER | | Thu Aug 02 1990 19:42 | 12 |
| Michael,
Does Oracle quote prices of U6000/80 and U6000/60 platforms? We are
working an RFP for the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and Oracle is one
competitor. They have teamed with Unisys and quoted a UNIX platform consisting
of the above two UNISYS boxes. (Actually, 2 of each). They quote the U6000/80
as being 80 mips (16 x 5 mip 80386 chips....?).
Anyway, if you have any info about Oracle on this platform, it might
prove useful.
Thanks, Rusty.
|
700.4 | Pyramid or Sequent? | POBOX::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Thu Aug 02 1990 21:49 | 19 |
| There are no Unisys prices in the Oracle pricing literature, which
leads me to believe that Unisys itself does the Oracle port to this Unisys
hardware, or that these Unisys boxes are really OEMed from Sequent or
Pyramid (probably Sequent). Sorry I can't offer more concrete data, but
there simply are not any prices from Oracle on this type of Unisys box.
Didn't I read somewhere that Unisys would OEM these from Pyramid or
Sequent?
Oracle (RDBMS-only) Sequent is by # of users:
>256 $174,000
129-256 $127,000
65-128 $103,000
33-64 $74,000
1-32 $53,000
Pyriamid pricing is exactly the same as Sequent pricing.
---- Michael Booth
|
700.5 | DECsystem 5000 prices ?
| TRHVS1::PAUL | Paul Helseth @TDO, EIS Norway | Fri Aug 03 1990 10:25 | 3 |
| What about DECsystem 5000 pricing for Oracle ?
Paul.
|
700.6 | Not Here | POBOX::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Fri Aug 03 1990 16:35 | 4 |
| The only RISC machines in the price list are the 5400, 5810, 5820, and
3100.
---- Michael Booth
|
700.7 | Per User $ is on all U* platforms | RENFRO::POWELL | Reed B Powell 422-7291 PTO Sales Support | Fri Aug 03 1990 19:45 | 8 |
| I believe that the per-user pricing is not just for Sequent and Pyramid
platforms, but for all UNIX/ULTRIX (including DEC's) platforms. It's a
common complaint from the VMS (and probably IBM) Oracle users. I
talked with Neil Mendelson from Oracle (he's one of the Oracle on DEC
people that are measured by the volume of DEC business) while at
DECworld, and he pretty much said that they knew people were not happy
with it, that it didn't make any sense, that they might change it
someday, but that it would not happen anytime soon.
|
700.8 | The facts | POBOX::BOOTH | What am I?...An Oracle? | Fri Aug 03 1990 21:49 | 48 |
| WRONG, WRONG, WRONG!! The per user pricing seems to have nothing to do
with the OS!
I am looking at the Oracle price list dated 7/1990. That's pretty
current.
The following platforms are priced per user:
Apollo DN3000/4000 (Domain SR10)
Aplool 10000 (Domain SR10)
AT&T, Model 6386 (Unix)
Convergent NGEN (CTOS/VM)
Data General Aviion (DG/UX)
Digital Microvax Products (VMS and Unix) - breakdown by 1-10, 1-20, and
unlimited. In other words, it matches the operating system.
HP 9000/3XX, and 9000/870s (HP-UX)
IBM PowerStation 320, 520, 530, 730 (AIX)
IBM RT (AIX)
MIPS RS2030 RISCstations (RISC operating system)
NCR Tower 32/825 (Unix)
Pyramid (OSX)
Sequent (Dynix)
Sun 3 (Sun OS)
Sun 4 (Sun OS)
Sun 386i (Sun OS)
Wang VS 5000 (VS)
PC Compatibles 286/386/486 (SCO Xenix, SCO UNIX, ISC 386/ix, PS/2 AIX,
CT-SPC Series)
The following platforms ARE NOT priced per user:
AT&T other than 6386 (Unix)
Data General other than Aviion (AOS/VS)
Digital (all platforms - Unix, Ultrix, VMS)
HP 980/x, 960, 950, 925LX, 922RX, (MPE/XL)
HP 9000/855s, 9000/850, 9000/840, 835, 845se, 9000/835, 835se, 832s,
9000/845s, 635sv, 645sv, 9000/815, 9000/500, 9000/808 (HP-UX)
All IBM 370
IBM PowerStations 930 and 540 (AIX)
MIPS RC6280, RC3260, M/2000, RC3240, RC2030 (RISC operating System)
NCR Tower all except 32/825 (Unix)
All Stratus (VOS)
All Wang except VS5000 (VS)
|
700.9 | pricing comparisons? | DPDMAI::DAVISGB | Thunder 'n Litnin.... | Sat Aug 04 1990 00:55 | 20 |
| Mike,
Can you work up a quick pricing for all the components a 'typical'
oracle shop would purchase for a typical VAX system (6410) so that I
can update the comparison overhead?
ORacle DB Engine
SQL
TPO
Network access
precompilers...
dictionary(if they have one yet...)
Cheers,
Gil
P.S. How's chi-town weather as compared to greater Nash-oo-way?
|
700.10 | Numbers | POBOX::BOOTH | Know new taxes | Mon Aug 06 1990 21:49 | 44 |
| RDBMS - $103,000
TPO - $ 41,200
SQL*Plus - $ 25,750
SQL*Connect to RMS - $ 25,750
SQL*Net - $ 20,600
DECnet Driver - $ 15,450
Precompiler - $ 15,450
-----------------------------
Total = $247,200
Yearly Maintenance
Year Amount
---------------------
1 0
2 $ 42,642
3 $ 49,038
4 $ 56,394
5 $ 64,853
---------------------
Total = $212,927
For the graphic, the yearly numbers should be:
1 $247,200
2 $289,842
3 $338,880
4 $395,274
5 $460,127
Yearly maintenance calculated as 15% of MLP. MLP increased 15% per
year.
SQL*Connect has been added since all tools that work with Rdb also
offer transparent access to RMS. SQL*Connect merely gives Oracle tools
same capability. Oracle will likely respond that SQL*Connect gives you
"SQL" connectivity to RMS. I would respond with the question, "How many
users will execute SQL queries vs. the number that will use the
4GL/report writer for queries?"
The weather here is much better, thanks. Dry and cool this week.
---- Michael Booth
|
700.11 | Hi Ho Silver...away! | DENVER::DAVISGB | Thunder 'n Litnin.... | Tue Aug 07 1990 22:54 | 4 |
| Thank You SIR!
Gil
|
700.12 | ORACLE is "Digital's...Software"(?) | MBALDY::LANGSTON | Rdb Sales Support Mercenary | Thu Aug 23 1990 23:52 | 15 |
| Re: .0
>I got my hands on the July, 1990 Oracle price list. Here's what it
>looks like, generally.
I got *my* hands on one, too. It's called "Digital's U.S. Software
Price Book. (Prices as of July 2, 1990)" Order number is EE-C0167-38.
See pages 120-132 for your one-stop data management software shopping.
It doesn't have prices for all processors or for the updates, maintenance,
support, etc., but call Oracle; they'll gladly tell you.
Bruce
Who's_presenting_Michael_Booth's_"Winning_The_Database"_to_2_sales -
_units_next_month
|
700.13 | Did you know this? | MBALDY::LANGSTON | Rdb Sales Support Mercenary | Tue Oct 09 1990 02:03 | 24 |
|
I N T E R O F F I C E M E M O R A N D U M
Date: 28-Sep-1990 02:17pm PDT
From:
Dept: EIS Third Party Bus Mgr
Tel No:
TO: See Below
Subject: Oracle Alert!
There is some confusion regarding the Oracle prices in our price book.
These prices are for ULTRIX ONLY. Some sales reps are using these prices
for VMS quotes and inadvertently creating a loss for Digital. Oracle prices
(and our costs) for VMS are significantly higher than for Ultrix. We are
trying to get the price book to more accurately reflect the description for
the next release.
In the interim, ANY Oracle VMS sales quote needs to be obtained through me.
I am at [Phone number deleted -For former Southwest area only]. Please
distribute this as you think appropriate.
|