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Title: | DEC Rdb against the World |
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Moderator: | HERON::GODFRIND |
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Created: | Fri Jun 12 1987 |
Last Modified: | Thu Feb 23 1995 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 1348 |
Total number of notes: | 5438 |
1224.0. "ORACLE7 Seminar - My Notes and Observations" by STOHUB::DSCGLF::FARLOW (Simplify!) Fri Jan 29 1993 23:14
Hello,
I attended an Oracle seminar in St. Louis yesterday. It was
the first Oracle seminar that I have attended. I am providing
my observations to help you understand and compete/partner with
Oracle.
First, my overall impression. The presentation/demo etc was
very polished. Oracle clearly understands that it makes sense
to invest once at a corporate level to develop a powerful
presentation/demo for all of its Sales Reps to use. I was very
impressed.
The sales rep was good at positioning and giving marketing
messages but was not that technical and the technical support
person was weak - could not handle things outside of the canned
demo, could not answer technical questions, and said some
things that left a bad impression - "ORACLE7 is being rolled
out very slowly because we want to try to catch as many bugs as
we can before we give it to customers this time"
In the demo, the examples given to illustrate features like
referential integrity were not very illuminating (stupid).
Overall themes:
o Cooperative Processing for Client Server Applications
o Distributed Database - allowing databases to be
partitioned among multiple systems.
o Simplified Database Coding
o The first database to have advanced capabilities
(which others have had for years)
o Multi-vendor environments including heterogeneous data
managers
Other points:
o Q&A delayed until end and then it was: "That is the
end of the session but feel free to stop by and ask
questions of any of us for as long as you would like"
Some questions were asked during the demos any way
and they were handled clumsily.
o The demo of the tools was entirely new MS-Windows
based tools that are not yet available (in Alpha
testing). A few screen prints of the existing tools
were shown in the presentation.
o Several slides illustrating Oracle configurations used
a VAX 4000 as the processor - some used IBM
mainframes too.
o With a better technical support person this session
would have been very effective - but his mistakes and
clumsiness made the audience restless and somewhat
skeptical.
How to win against this seminar:
Stress that ORACLE7 is a brand new release with many
sophisticated features that perform complicated functions -
two-phase commit across heterogeneous data managers, cost-based
query optimizer, etc. Discuss how Rdb has had these features
for many years and they are robust. Mention Oracle's history
of buggy software, missed delivery dates, and poor technical
support.
During customer testimonial videos, MIS directors and others
consistently spoke about what the new features of ORACLE7 WILL
let them do or SHOULD allow them to do. I don't recall anyone
talking about their actual experience with ORACLE7 - just what
that ought to be able to do. Encourage customers to ask for a
local reference that is using ORACLE7 - and if they want
client/server they should ask for a client server reference
(this can be dangerous if you don't have one though).
Discuss costs and support. Pricing was never mentioned.
Address the issue of the astronomical benchmark numbers 600 TPS
- this has clearly evolved into quite a game between vendors
and does not reflect performance of real-world applications.
Question how easy the system is to use in the real-world not in
just a canned demo. It also was not clear how a large
development team would be able to work on a common application.
Detailed description of the session:
The session consisted of presentations, videos, and
demonstrations. The presentation was very high quality, in
color, done with a PC package. From a menu, the presenter
could select videos to display.
The topics for the 4 hour session were:
o Downsizing to Client/Server - Benefits and Problems
o ORACLE7 - Cooperative-Server Technology
o Oracle Enterprise-Wide Solutions
o Questions and Answers
The presentation started by talking about the needs for
client/server and distributed solutions. It then positioned
ORACLE7 as the solution ("The World's First Cooperative-Server
Database").
A very impressive video was shown that had Bill Gates of
Microsoft, Steven Jobs of Next, John Sculley of Apple, Scott
McNealy of Sun, and John Young of HP endorsing ORACLE7.
Specific comments were made such as:
Gates: "ORACLE7 provides a tremendous server database for
advanced client/server applications - perfect for Microsoft
front end tools to use".
Jobs: "ORACLE7's parallel server architecture is breakthrough
technology that promises tremendous performance advantages for
applications"
Sculley: "Oracle's products are very compatible with Apple's
style of computing in that they hide the complexities of the
database management technology from the developer and
end-user".
Many favorable comments were made - it seemed to go on forever.
These were very specific comments about the features and
characteristics of ORACLE. It was very impressive and really
set the stage for the audience to be responsive to the
presentation that was to follow. It certainly provided instant
credibility which would make any claims credible. I was
amazed.
The presentation then continued. ORACLE7 was positioned against
"Early Client/Server" solutions. The main theme was that
early client server required complex coding whereas ORACLE7 is
very simple.
Examples were given of ORACLE7 SQL vs "early client/server"
SQL. Examples included Queries, Update Transctions,
Distributed Joins, referential integrity, 2PC, and use of
gateways that provide 2PC across heterogeneous data managers
(DB2, SQL/DS, RMS, HP TurboImage). The ORACLE code consisted
of simple select statements and the "early client/server" code
was very complicated (similar to the Oracle vs. Sybase ads).
Performance benchmark slides were shown including a TPS/B
showing ORACLE at 315 TPS and Rdb at 194 TPS on a VAX 6560.
A number of slides with a history of FIRSTs like:
1979 FIRST SQL Based RDBMS
1983 FIRST RDBMS to Support Symetric Multiprocessors
1985 FIRST Client/Server RDBMS
1986 FIRST RDBMS wiht Distributed Query
1991 FIRST RDBMS certified 100% NIST Compliant
1992 FIRST cooperative server database
A demo of database features was given that included:
1. Distributed Query (across nodes)
2. Location Transparency - set up a synonym for the
remote database very similar to defining a logical.
3. Referential Integrity
4. 2 Phase commit
The demo was very canned with code appearing in a window with
the press of a button. One or two words were added and then it
was executed.
On the two phase commit everything got messed up. He tried to
execute the transaction and before issuing a commit he shut
down the system that one database was on. Then it would not
reboot. After 3 tries and 20 minutes it was back up but the
transaction just hung there. In trying to query the record a
message came back that a transaction was in doubt.
He backed out of the SQL shell window and then went back in and
executed the transaction. It erroneously showed the account
balance as it would be before any transaction. When this was
pointed out he said there was a bug that caused the database to
get reset when exiting the shell (this was probably accurate
but the words he used sounded bad and there was a lot of
snickering). Needless to say, at the end of this demo the mood
had changed completely and never really got back on track.
A presentation of the tools followed along with three
impressive testimonial videos of current Oracle customers who
will be using ORACLE7 - ITT Hartford, JJ Kenney Stock Brokers,
US West.
Then the Case tools, report writers, query tools and forms
generators were presented. It was rather confusing with only
one or two slides per tool. It was very difficult to know how
they really worked or whether they were good or not.
A demo of the not-yet-released MS-Windows based tools followed
that was okay. I was thinking that the tools might at some
point be similar to Visual Basic - who knows when. They stated
that they are informally planning to release the new tools at a
rate of one tool per month because they have learned and they
don't want to be swamped with customer problems with all of the
tools all being released at the same time. It didn't inspire
confidence.
That was it. Throughout the session people were leaving. It
started with around 200 people and finished with around 100.
Most of the attendees were from small companies.
I was very surprised that the Oracle representatives were not
as skilled as I thought they would be. However, in an area
with strong Sales and Support representatives, the session
could be very powerful and difficult to overcome. I still
think that by stressing certain points, Rdb can still fare very
well against Oracle.
I have the actual slides from the seminar . If someone really
needs a copy, contact me. Also, if you have any questions,
give me a call.
Steve Farlow
DTN: 445-7212
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1224.1 | Deja vu | KERNEL::JACKSON | Peter Jackson - UK CSC TP/IM | Wed Feb 03 1993 18:54 | 16 |
| > First, my overall impression. The presentation/demo etc was
> very polished. Oracle clearly understands that it makes sense
> to invest once at a corporate level to develop a powerful
> presentation/demo for all of its Sales Reps to use. I was very
> impressed.
> The sales rep was good at positioning and giving marketing
> messages but was not that technical and the technical support
> person was weak - could not handle things outside of the canned
> demo, could not answer technical questions, and said some
> things that left a bad impression
These are exactly the impressions I got when I attended an ORACLE
seminar about six years ago (before I joined Digital).
Peter
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