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Oracle Database Certifications Are No Longer Permanent

jfruh writes: It used to be that you could get an Oracle database certification and declare yourself Oracle-certified for the rest of your career. That time is now over, causing a certain amount of consternation among DBAs. On the one hand, it makes sense that someone who's only been certified on a decade-old version of the product should need to prove they've updated their skills. On the other, Oracle charges for certification and will definitely profit from this shift."

5 of 108 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Key question by Z00L00K · · Score: 3, Insightful

    A certification doesn't make you a good DBA. It only tells the employer that you have understood some basics.

    A good DBA is able to see what the best solution is for the company and the product it delivers. It's way more important to understand the demands the product have on the database than anything else.

    --
    If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
  2. Re:Give me $5.000 by Charliemopps · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I agree with you when it comes to third party certification courses, but not when its the company certifying you in its own products - they have a vested PR interest to not endorse people who can't do the job.

    You don't work with Oracle do you?
    Their primary marketing slogan is: "Shut the fuck up and give us your money"

  3. Re:Not a great loss... by StormReaver · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Oracle is becoming increasingly irrelevant....

    I snuck PostgreSQL into the organization in 2005 to handle certain Web activity. It worked great for years, and my boss later decided to use it for other projects that were slated to use Oracle. All of those projects were so maintenance free at the database end that we later decided to replace Oracle with PostgreSQL for all of our database needs.

    We found that the Oracle "features" we paid for failed when they were needed most, and therefore didn't work as advertised. PostgreSQL's replication and standby features would have been good enough.

    I use PostgreSQL for all of my low end needs, too. I tried MySQL off and on for years, and it is still a terrible database (alter the data to fit the contraints!) when data are important. Even more exciting, though, is that PostgreSQL is slowly adding high-end features into its core infrastructure. And those features adhere to the PostgreSQL ACID philosophy.

  4. Freudian slip by RDW · · Score: 3, Insightful

    On the other, Oracle charges for certification and will definitely profit from this shift.

    I had to re-read that sentence - the first time I didn't notice the 'f' in 'shift' and thought the summary was unusually direct.

  5. Re:Key question by IndustrialComplex · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It doesn't work like that. You would still have your certification. But it would be the old certification. What Oracle will do is issue their new improved updated latest whizbang certification 2.0.

    So you would have your DBA certification, and it would still be exactly what it always was, but you would not have the DBA 2.0 certification.

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