Maybe it's just me, but I can't see any of this putting pressure on Oracle to
drop prices. The price will likely be the same as running MS SQL on windows,
which has been ticking upward sharply over the last few releases.
I'd also expect slow adoption of this outside *aaS platforms.
Thinking about your current databases; how many applications do you support
which would jump to MS SQL, once it's on Linux? I can't think of a single one.
Any of those that are candidates are caught up in a larger architectural shift
or had already been considering a move to MS SQL on Windows.
All these factors make me think along similar lines as Tim; this isn't about
price, but positioning.
On Mar 7, 2016, at 5:57 PM, Mladen Gogala <gogala.mladen@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On 03/07/2016 06:09 PM, Tim Gorman wrote:
They're going after MySQL and Oracle in the cloud, no more waiting for MySQL
and Oracle to come after them.
Get some popcorn and have a seat, this is going to be brilliant.
I think that Oracle may soon become a lot more affordable than now. However,
they haven't won many friends by auditing raids and predatory pricing. Oracle
will now face an uphill battle to win the small and medium sized companies
again.
--
Mladen Gogala
Oracle DBA
Tel: (347) 321-1217
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