Oracle’s Ellison aims at Amazon with fresh cloud services

People gather prior to the start of a keynote speech at the All Things Oracle OpenWorld Summit in San Francisco, California September 24, 2013.  REUTERS/Jana Asenbrennerova/File Photo               GLOBAL BUSINESS WEEK AHEAD PACKAGE Ð SEARCH ÒBUSINESS WEEK AHEAD SEPTEMBER 12Ó FOR ALL IMAGES

 

Bloomberg

Oracle Corp. unveiled new services that help customers take advantage of cloud computing, putting it more directly in competition with Amazon.com Inc.
The company has announced Cloud@Customer, which puts the same hardware and software Oracle uses in its data centers in the customers’ own facilities, Executive Chairman Larry Ellison said Sunday during a presentation at Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco. Customers who get the gear in-house won’t need to buy the technology; instead, they can subscribe to the service on a monthly basis, just like they would if they were buying from a distant cloud-computing site. He also announced what he said were more powerful products at a lower cost than those from Amazon, the leading public cloud provider and Oracle’s No. 1 competitor in infrastructure.
“Amazon’s lead is over,” Ellison said. “Amazon’s going to have serious competition.” Oracle is stepping up efforts in cloud-based technology, rolling
out new products and making acquisitions to woo businesses that prefer to buy computing, networking and storage capabilities via networks from large providers. Amazon, which
helped pioneer the market known as the public cloud, has grabbed the attention of startups and corporations around the world, an effort that’s also put it in competition with Microsoft Corp. and Google.
“Oracle is going to be a major player in the cloud — the size of its existing customer base gives it a great opportunity,” Al Hilwa, an analyst at IDC, said in an e-mail. “In terms of market leadership, I think we will have to watch how fast Oracle can crank growth and specifically investment in infrastructure to really get ahead of the competition.”

BEHIND THE FIREWALL
The new Cloud@Customer program will be managed by Oracle. The service will act as an alternative to moving everything to the cloud right away or keeping everything in-house, Ellison said. “We’ll put that part of the Oracle cloud behind your firewall, where it’s more protected and adheres to certain statutory requirements,” he said. “The Cloud@Customer machines are identical.”
During Ellison’s presentation, which stretched for more than an hour, he unveiled several new services that touched on areas including databases and programming methods. It even included a demonstration for a new ChatBot platform that integrates with Facebook Inc.’s Messenger application. Still, cloud was a key focus — including details about its fresh approach to infrastructure that’s built for speed and availability, Ellison said.
“Oracle has established a thoughtful foundation,” Chad Eschinger, an analyst at Gartner, said in an e-mail. “We need to keep in mind that it’s years behind but able to leverage new technology and years of lessons learned enabling it to ramp much more quickly.”

PALERRA PURCHASE
Redwood City, California-based Oracle said earlier Sunday that it was acquiring startup Palerra, helping enhance security and identity capabilities for cloud applications. Terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.
“Palerra offers a unique combination of visibility into cloud usage, data security, user behavior analytics, and security configuration, with automated incident responses,” the company said on its website. “Customers can respond to cloud security incidents in real-time, protecting sensitive company data and workloads across all of the leading cloud services.”

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend