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1140.1 | Rdb to Alpha OSF/1 Press Release | WILBRY::JACKSON | My mail - WILBRY::, my strategy:survival | Tue Apr 21 1992 18:49 | 77 |
| From: WILBRY::VOELKER "Diane Voelker, NAS Product Marketing, 264-3899" 21-APR-1992 11:19:30.08
To: BOB
CC: VOELKER
Subj: Rdb Ports to ALPHA Open VMS and ALPHA OSF/1 Press Release
Contact:
Brian Duggleby
(603) 884-2423
DIGITAL TO MAKE Rdb/VMS RELATIONAL DBMS AVAILABLE ON
ALPHA OPEN VMS AND OSF/1 SYSTEMS
MAYNARD, MA. -- April 21, 1992 -- Digital Equipment Corporation
announced today that its Rdb/VMS relational database will be
ported to the Alpha Open VMS and Alpha OSF/1 platforms. Rdb/VMS
is Digital's strategic relational database for mission critical
production applications and is the leading database on VMS,
with over 20,000 development licenses sold worldwide.
"Digital's Information Network strategy is to integrate
heterogeneous data managers from multiple vendors and platforms.
DECworld will give customers the opportunity to see the advanced
technology that allows Rdb to integrate multiple vendors' data
managers, residing on different platforms. By making Rdb
available on Alpha platforms, Digital is protecting its
customers' investments and enhancing the Information Network for
all present and future customers," said David Stone, Vice
President of Digital's Software Products Group.
Customers who have already installed, or who are considering
installing the Rdb/VMS database for VMS-based applications
because of its high performance, can be assured their databases,
tools and applications can be smoothly transitioned to Alpha
platforms if they choose to migrate or upgrade in the future.
"Digital has thousands of customers who rely on Rdb to run
critical production applications on VAX systems. These same
customers will want the ability to easily migrate their
applications and databases to Alpha platforms over time. Rdb
running on both the Open VMS and OSF/1 operating systems will
provide customers with an open production environment offering
industry-leading performance, functionality and
cost-effectiveness," said David Stone.
Digital will announce specific pricing and availability for its
Rdb/VMS database on Alpha platforms in the near future.
Digital Equipment Corporation, headquartered in Maynard,
Massachusetts, is the leading worldwide supplier of networked
computer systems, software, and services. The company pioneered
and leads the industry in interactive, distributed and
multivendor computing. Digital and its partners deliver the
power to use the best integrated solutions - from desktop to
data center - in open information environments.
####
Note to Editors: Alpha, Open VMS, Rdb/VMS, VAX and VMS are
trademarks of Digital Equipment Corporation.
CORP/93/
|
1140.2 | What happens to RdbStar now? | TPS::SHAH | Amitabh Shah - Just say NO to decaf. | Tue Apr 21 1992 20:52 | 0 |
1140.3 | | UKEDU::SMITHB | Bazzoo� | Wed Apr 22 1992 14:03 | 8 |
| >
> -< What happens to RdbStar now? >-
>
And does Rdb/VMS still get called Rdb/VMS or does
it become DECRdb?
Barry
|
1140.4 | Still not really OPEN!!! | BGO01::KETIL | | Wed Apr 22 1992 18:41 | 17 |
|
From a customers point of view, Rdb/OPEN (My suggetion) will still be
propitary compared to Oracle, Sybase, Ingres etc. because it will only
run on the ALPHA platform.
I also think this is to late, RdbSTAR will give the customer a better
portability (The target for RdbStar will be other then just ALPHA).
I'm also concerned about the marketing message having to database
products competing each other. Some marketing persons will
say no to that statement, but Rdb/OPEN and RdbStar will compete
and make lot of confusion and make customers believe Digital are not
serious about its database strategi.
Regards
Ketil
|
1140.5 | | COOKIE::BERENSON | Lex mala, lex nulla | Wed Apr 22 1992 19:24 | 13 |
| It is still too early to tell what the Rdb vs Rdbstar relationship will
be vis a vi positioning. Pointless to speculate right now and this isn't
th forum for it anyway.
Rdb naming has to be re-examined anyway in light of the VMS name change
to OpenVMS. Given that 99% of the time the press, analysts, customers,
and even DEC people just call it "Rdb" I have a preference for a new
naming convention....but this also isn't the right forum. In reality,
the company has naming conventions for its products and those conventions
are evolving with the move to OpenVMS. Rdb will have to evolve
in line with those corporate conventions, which will also dictate a name
for the OSF/1 product.
|
1140.6 | Read carefully | KCOHUB::DAZOFF::DUNCAN | Gerry Duncan @KCO, 452-3445 | Wed Apr 22 1992 19:32 | 25 |
| Re. .-1
Re: only Alpha and portability
So what if Rdb/??? only runs on Alpha ? If Alpha is as "hot" as
everyone says AND if the customer can pick from OpenVMS or OSF1,
then we may indeed have a winning hand. On the other hand, it's
not clear how profitable even Oracle can be by porting their
database to every toaster that comes to market. IMO, we may want
to be content offering the customer his choice of "server" based
on Alpha or VAX hardware. Then, let the customer decide what
kind of client he wants. RdbStar can still be the client ...
and, more importantly, the integrator of legacy data.
Please read Stone's comments again. One of his reasons for making
this decision is to preserve the "production" database market
share we've been working our butts off to build. In many instances,
"production" database requirements are far different than distributed
database requirements. Rdb can deliver the bacon for the "production"
aspect of the Information Network while Star can deliver the distributed
pieces that customer may move to in the future.
-- gerry
|
1140.7 | RdbStar <> Rdb/??? | UKEDU::SMITHB | Bazzoo� | Wed Apr 22 1992 19:57 | 6 |
|
Clearly understood they are not the same beasties!
Just wondering about the name?
Barry
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1140.8 | Still concerned!! | BGO01::KETIL | | Thu Apr 23 1992 15:12 | 23 |
|
RE .5
My message was no speculation, but a warning if we don't give
the marked the right message.
Most of the customers I know who has choosen Oracle, it was not for
Oracle's profitt, but for the availability of porting it to IBM, HP
SUN etc. The reason is, they want to change vendor if the service
becomes bad. Therefore OSF/1 is important, not ALPHA-OSF/1,
even if ALPHA becomes as hot as somne believes.
Yes hopefully, not only Digital will sell ALPHA-OSF/1, but I'm pretty
sure that SUN, IBM, HP won't. And they are the competitors who are
able to compete with us then it comes to service.
I will not speculate more about Rdb_Star vs Rdb/VMS, but it ain't
profitable to maintain two good database products, when we even have
problem to get the sales people to sell the one we have today!
Regards
Ketil
|
1140.9 | Confused !! | UNTADH::LEWIS | F9 Pilot Sliced, Diced and Shredded | Thu Apr 23 1992 17:16 | 25 |
| I had to re-read all this several times to understand what is being
said here. I get the strong impression that either we are calling
RdBStar "RdB" to try to keep customer interest, or we are going to
offer a stripped-down version of RdBStar, and call it RdB.
Why ? well, from .0
>Accordingly, we have been pursuing our Information Network strategy.
> The future distributed database
>technology that we will be demonstrating at DECworld will provide a
>data management layer that will integrate Rdb with data managers from
>many other vendors on many platforms."
Clear references to RdBStar. Why, if this is a totally new product does
David Stone start talking about what the Information Network will offer
?
Also, how can we talk about RdB available soon in the same context as
RdBStar being a future technology ?
Any comments from someone who has actually been asked to write RdB for
OSF ?
Rob
|
1140.10 | NOT! | NOVA::FEENAN | Jay Feenan, Rdb/VMS engineering | Thu Apr 23 1992 23:25 | 3 |
| This is Rdb/VMS ported to OSF, not what is currently known as Rdbstar!
-Jay
|
1140.11 | Next question is, when ? | UNTADH::LEWIS | F9 Pilot Sliced, Diced and Shredded | Fri Apr 24 1992 13:30 | 3 |
| Just testing :-)
Rob
|
1140.12 | We should do what customers ask us to | WIBBIN::NOYCE | Otherwise, pound the table | Fri Apr 24 1992 17:14 | 8 |
| I don't know exactly how Rdb will be implemented on OSF/1 Alpha, but it seems
likely that it would be technically feasible to port the result to other
U*x-like systems. The announcement in .0 didn't say we wouldn't do that.
Still, the customer's best approach to vendor-independence is to code to
that subset of SQL that is widely implemented, or assess the cost whenever
they use a vendor's extensions. How many Oracle users are happy to be
hardware-independent, but locked in to their software vendor?
|
1140.13 | | NOVA::FEENAN | Jay Feenan, Rdb/VMS engineering | Fri Apr 24 1992 17:24 | 15 |
| re:-.1
This is exactly the point of all of this (and part of the NAS message).
Make our SQL as standard as you get. Place the database system on an
OS that is standard and provide complete application independence.
This is much more than can be said by most of our competitiors.
At the current time I can not comment on the rest of the Rdb/OSF port,
but people will be made aware of what is being done when the time is
appropriate.
-Jay
|
1140.14 | | CSC32::S_MAUFE | is that a spin dryer in the cab? | Fri Apr 24 1992 18:38 | 9 |
|
yeah! Rdb on MSDOS !yeah!
Sure hope we don't burn heretics on the stake, I smell lighter fluid..
Simon
|
1140.15 | Rdb/VMS on NT/ALPHA ----- YEAH!!!! | BGO01::KETIL | | Sat Apr 25 1992 20:37 | 7 |
|
We have to realize that NT/ALPHA will be more important as a
server for small systems then OSF/ALPHA.
PORT IT TO NT/ALPHA TOO.
Ketil
|
1140.16 | Rdb: It's not just a database anymore | JENNA::SANTIAGO | Write one for the GIPper 352-2866 | Mon May 04 1992 19:56 | 91 |
| Rdb, the database, embodies a lot more than relational bits, but Digital the
company and our willingness to underwrite the applications our customers
develop with it. Our cost structure in essence underwrites a lot of sales
support people, and I expect that Alpha prices will likewise continue this
policy. I for one was in favor of the move, however it by itself is not the
whole solution. First the problem statement:
[1] Rdb is difficult to sell vs. Oracle, Sybase, etc. since the sales org. from
those companies are more focused/goaled. A quick test is ask your salesrep
the names of 5 Rdb people in their geography they can count on. Ask
yourself the names of those who know Rdb, SQL and use of products like
RdbExpert, DECtrace and/or DECps. These are the tools we rely on for help
when performance is an issue; our competitors blame the hardware or o/s.
[2] Rdb is a database MANAGEMENT SYSTEM - not a development tool to supersede
ISAM as the file access method of new applications. Consider that companies
like Oracle, Sybase, etc. focus on the "MS-DOS" DBA, as the level of
expertise required to use the product. For these customers, having an Rdb
pocket booklet would be the ideal if coupled with the graphical schema
editor.
[3] Our customers are less sophisticated. I've rarely ever found anyone trained
on relational design, etc. that didn't have an IBM background. For these
sites, they don't consider Rdb a product, but Digital the company, and all
the support that goes along with it. Other, new, customers, however want
product. They are the ones who do the spreadsheet comparisons and are
initially (i.e., during the sales cycle) not interested in all the full
strength capabilities we have to offer. They are most interested in time
to market and portability. They see little value in being dbms hochos, but
more in delivering an application early, and receiving thier bonus.
What that in mind, in steps Rdb* [sic], the integrating dbms engine/environment
for the masses. Four of our larger dbms competitors (IBM, INGRES, INFORMIX,
and TANDEM) have tried to being such capabilties to the mark without a proper
base and certainly but not first grooming the market to the need to which they
would fill. They (and us I'd argue) center our functionality around integrating
isolated data into a uniform information exchange to be useful throughout an
organization. Besides being quite a technical feat, it's an enormous political
and cultural challenge. This challenges being inhouse.
Some would argue that the market wasn't ready for DEC to change horses midstream
in their relational product, and certainly didn't want to make the same mistake
that the ACMS vs. Intact strategy did (i.e., two products in the same space).
The major issue then, was maintaining our legacy applications, the few we have
(as it is perceived by sales visa-vis Oracle, Sybase, etc.), with Rdb and get
those customers over to Alpha. Technically speaking, wherever there's a BLISS
compiler, there should be Rdb, so long as the price structure of the product
and/or platform supports it (and we can make a little money too;-). I'd argue
that the language the product is writtin in, is not the determing factor, but
what monies are to be made there, and is it a 'product' vs. a 'platform'. Lots
of folks see Rdb as the 'platform' and Rdb* as a 'product'.
Our major internal issue was how to empower sales to sell 1 product, across a
number of platforms and keep the selling simple. Some have proposed selling
Rdb* as
a) an add/on to Rdb,
b) EIS service offering, or
c) tiered #1 Rdb* Lite == Rdb for <platform>,
#2 Rdb* Integrator == No DBMS engine,
#3 Rdb* the whole enchilada
While we may have alured the fears of many in regards to Rdb, it still doesn't
address the major issues which are:
[1] price Rdb (or any product) for an open systems platforms from DEC
Alpha) vs. 3rd parties (i.e., Intel, MIPS)
[2] what support would we provide for our s/w on hardware not supplied
by us - or any support; the mindset is that we're still a h/w
company
[3] maturation process for the field and customers, on the global
issues of integration without replication, and being polically and
culturally achievable without being a show stopper to todays
applications
[4] can we as a company develop s/w for the 3-5 year application life
which focus on development speed and portability and not longivity
of the application.
Many of these issues are not specific to Rdb, but it seems it and probably ACMS
will lead the way for many other products. How these two products dance thru
the 90's will say a lot about our ability to support a changing customer base
and a sales cycle we are having less and less control. At least for time being
we've simplified our selling of a relational products on OSF/1. How Rdb*
bits get introduced into this recipe will depend a lot on what the market
perception is for such a technology, and it a purchaseable item or mindset.
/los
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