Amazon Cloud Chief Jabs Oracle: 'Customers Are Sick of It' (cnbc.com)
It's no secret that Amazon and Oracle don't see eye to eye. But things are far from improving, it appears. From a report: On Wednesday, two months after Oracle co-CEO Mark Hurd called Amazon's cloud infrastructure "old" and claimed his company was gaining share, Amazon Web Services chief Andy Jassy slammed Oracle for locking customers into painfully long and expensive contracts. "People are very sensitive about being locked in given the experience they've had the last 10 to 15 years," Jassy said on Wednesday on stage at Amazon's AWS Summit in San Francisco. "When you look at cloud, it's nothing like being locked into Oracle." Jassy was addressing a cultural shift in the way technology is bought and sold. No longer does the process involve the purchase of heavy proprietary software with multi-year contracts that include annual maintenance fees. Now, Jassy says, it's about choice and ease of use, including letting clients turn things off if they're not working.
Oracle: We own our software ... and our customers.
Amazon: We own our software ... and we are our customers' assistants.
When Oracle's cloud offerings can even come close to the reliability that AWS achieves at it's scale, then we can talk about 'old.'
Since when is SaaS not all about lock in?
Screw oracle. They bought dyndns and we now need to find something else
I like the fight: competition in action. I wish telecoms would bash each other over forced bundling, lousy reliability, lousy customer service, etc. etc. etc. etc.
Table-ized A.I.
Oracle is such an entrenched, parasitic, rent-seeking corporate shit pile compared to most of the industry that they make even staunchly conservative capitalists tempted for a split second to raise the sickle and hammer after dealing with them.
hell be dead by then yo
Speaking of old, why not hook up a mainframe to the "cloud"? It's all built around I/O, partitioning and billing the user anyway.
Let's have a single computer datacenter. We can achieve the classic vision of one computer per continent.
I believe curious people might try to use it. I know there are emulators and a freeware IBM OS version from before I was born, so it is certain that millions of people never had the chance to try doing something, anything at all with a mainframe.
I have a pitch for it : "The state of the art in NoSQL and consolidation."
Yeah, fuck these rich cocksuckers, and if you care about your business or data at all, do not use either of them.
"No longer does the process involve the purchase of heavy proprietary software with multi-year contracts that include annual maintenance fees. "
I guess the two sides really don't know how each other works....
This is exactly what Microsoft sounded like in the early '90s when they were busy grabbing market share from the workstation and minicomputer crowd, along with others like Novell.
Which contract? Very few if anything from Oracle requires contract more than a year. As far as locking is concerned, it is with all products. Your Excel files are, well Excel file. You can't open Emacs and that is not Microsoft is going to solve. Try any other alternative to Oracle, let us say SAP, SalesForce, Workday and you will see the same thing. Even Amazon will have the same issue in SaaS market. For IaaS, there is no locking. You can move from Oracle to any other provided immediately.
I see two ends of the spectrum: ... tons of really cool stuff, all of it industry-grade software.
Want an own DB?
Use FOSS.
MariaDB, MySQL, Postgres, Mongo, Couch,
I see virtually no usecase at all for non-FOSS DB technology in a fresh project these days.
Want to do the cloud DB thing? ... and probably is.
Use Google Spanner.
That's what Oracle should be afraid of
We suffer more in our imagination than in reality. - Seneca
Anyone who thinks otherwise has likely never had to go through Oracle's strong-arm sales tactics (I mean contract audits) and/or has never worked with or for a former Oracle sales manager.
I previously worked for a couple of guys that think they were king shit cause they made some likely pretty good money selling (I mean performing sales audits) for 6-7 years for Oracle. They would tell stories about how awesome they were and how many sales they had, etc. If you are a sadistic son of a bitch that gives zero fucks about your actual customer and only cares about making money then you are definitely going to be right at home in Oracle. I believe business have wised up (mostly) to Oracle's ways and Oracle is definitely in a downward spiral with more customers fleeing from Oracle than they are gaining year over year.
Java is even older than AWS! Should I stop using it?? I'm so confused!
Andy Jassy is almost correct, except that he's listing all the benefits of open source instead of them being 'cloud' benefits.
On a long enough timeline, the survival rate for everyone drops to zero.
Oracle has perfected the "dumbed-down, but still expensive" model of support for their products. One week, you are talking to the sharp tech support person in Australia, or the US or UK, the next week it's some new person from another country who struggles to understand your technical issue. But since you are locked into the product, you learn to deal with that agony and move forward.
What Oracle has done here is gotten you used to having less options among the lowest common denominator. In other words, you are happy to forgo the awesome speed and agility of an Oracle cloud database for the privilege of dealing with a vendor who provides an easier entry and exit, even if you have to do more of the heavy lifting yourself. Which you probably ended up doing anyway to a large extent when dealing with a "good enough" tech support process. To me, that is the complete irony of the race to the bottom that has been going on for so long.