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Oracle To Sell Database Hardware

qazsedcft writes "In a move the company is billing as its first foray into the hardware business, Oracle Corp. said Wednesday it will begin selling server computers that come with its database software pre-installed."

4 of 93 comments (clear)

  1. Actual Information by fm6 · · Score: 5, Informative

    It would be nice if submitters took a moment to find some actual information, instead of just submitting the first (usually content free) blurb that they see. A tiny amount of Googling would have turned up this Oracle product page with full technical specs.

    It's worth mentioning that this product is not a computer. It's a 42U rack stuffed 8 dbms servers, 14 storage servers, and 4 switches. Which means a lot of low-end 1U servers. Not exactly a lot of computer power. One or two 4U dbms servers and 3 or 4 4U storage servers (like Sun's X4600 and X4500 boxes) would seem more to the point.

    1. Re:Actual Information by More_Cowbell · · Score: 4, Informative

      Which means a lot of low-end 1U servers. Not exactly a lot of computer power.

      You could have gone one step further and actually read the specs before deriding them...

      8-HP Proliant DL360 G5 database servers, with
      2 quad-core Intel Xeon Processor E5430 (2.66GHz)
      32GB memory
      1-HP InfiniBand Dual Port HCA
      4-146GB SAS 10K hard disk drives
      4-24-port InfiniBand switches

      14-HP Exadata Storage Server Hardware--each is an HP ProLiant DL180 G5, with
      2 quad-core Intel Xeon Processor E5430 (2.66GHz)
      8GB memory
      1-HP InfiniBand Dual Port HCA
      12-300GB SAS or 12-1TB SATA disk drives

      Now I won't argue that Sun doesn't put out more robust hardware (for that matter HP does, the DL line is far from their top end), but this is not exactly 'low end' computing power here...

      --
      Experience teaches only the teachable. -AH
  2. Re:No Surprise by fm6 · · Score: 5, Informative

    RTFA. There's no "Oracle machine." This is a cobranded HP/Oracle product.

  3. Re:No Surprise by cerberusss · · Score: 4, Informative

    Why wouldn't Oracle just throw in the hardware with the costs of the license?

    That's pretty funny. Maybe the hardware you use at home is cheap. And maybe you even have a couple of throw-away Supermicros in a datacenter. But the Sun and/or EMC kit that, say, a publisher buys is not cheap. Just a couple of 16-way Sun servers with a decent SAN with backup possibility starts around 250K. After negotiating, that is. Now, you can say that this doesn't matter when your Oracle licenses run up to 2,500K but it still isn't pocket change like you're making it sound like.

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