Posts Tagged ‘Rob’


Fusion Applications Version 1 Discussed by Larry Ellison

October 14th, 2009 by Robert McMillen • No Comments »

This afternoon, Larry Ellison lifted the curtain providing more information about the Fusion Applications.

For several years Oracle has mentioned its plans to introduce this completely new applications suite.  Today, Ellison said that Version 1 of Fusion Application will include the following functionality:

  • Financial Management
  • Human Capital Mgmt
  • Sales and Marketing
  • Supply Chain Management
  • Project Portfolio Management
  • Procurement Management
  • Governance, Risk and Compliance

Version 1 of Fusion is now in the test phase with Oracle customers.  It is described as being SAAS ready, based on Service Oriented Architecture, using embedded Business Intelligence and based on industry-standard Java and Middleware.  One slide he showed indicated that the first version has over 6000 tables, 6500 objects, 18,000 views, 1215 services, and 2500 application modules.

Fusion is designed to support management by exception by providing:

  • What do you need to know using Business Status
  • What do you need to do with Action and Task Lists
  • How to do it with Task Flows
  • Who do you need to Contact will Collaboration

Final comments by Ellison indicated that Version 1 of Fusion Applications will be released in 2010.

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So Your Manager Wouldn’t Spring for Oracle Open World This Year?

October 14th, 2009 by Robert McMillen • No Comments »

You wanted to be here but it’s another year of budget cuts.  Sure the executives are still flying first class all over the country but you are stuck at home again.  I know it’s a bummer but there is a tiny silver lining for those who are unable to attend.  You can still get access to those sessions you wanted to see.

Unlike those who attended you won’t have sore feet and lack of feeling in your posterior.  And you won’t be off work for scheduled back surgery to repair your ruptured disc caused by carrying around all of the swag during the day.  Even better, you get to avoid all of the boring sessions where the presenter laboriously reads the same slides which were shown previously in six other sessions.  Seriously, you should count your blessings for not being subjected to these problems.

Here’s your consolation prize:

Oracle is releasing all 1800+ conference sessions, plus the keynotes for only $245.  If someone from your organization did attend, they can access the same content for free. The sessions will be available as downloadable mp3’s.  Slides will be available in Powerpoint format.

More information is available at the links below.

You can also visit the official Oracle OpenWorld Web site for more information, to purchase, or for access.

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JRockit VE Offers JVM Without Requiring an Operating System

October 14th, 2009 by Robert McMillen • No Comments »

Oracle will be releasing in 2010 several new products for their WebLogic Suite. One of these will be JRockit VE (JRVE). JRVE will be a bare-metal install not requiring an underlying operating system.

Oracle believes they can coax significant performance gains for the JRockit JVM by removing the O/S barrier. Additional benefits include simplified administration, improved security and a single configuration file for setup.

For now JRVE is not expected to be a stand-alone product and will be used in support of the new Weblogic Suite Virtual Edition expected in 2010.

Some interesting specifications for JRVE versus a typical Linux implementation:

  • 10 Commands
  • 100 Parameters
  • 1 Administrative Tool
  • 1 second Boot Time
  • 2MB (not GB) Memory Requirement
  • No Shell support

With JRVE, the layers on the technology stack will shrink to just the JVM and the Application.  This is distinctly less than many Java environments that require the O/S, JVM, App Server, SOA and then the Application on top of it.

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More Oracle Acronymns including OFRA (Not Oprah)

October 14th, 2009 by Robert McMillen • No Comments »

It’s time to learn some new acronyms so put your thinking caps on!

Today’s first acronymn is OFRA or Oracle Fusion Reference Architecture. If you are familiar with the terms “Oracle Fusion” you will recognize that OFRA is a term that will have a growing impact in the coming years.

OFRA provides Oracle’s view on consistent architectural practices that they will be using for the Fusion applications. OFRA is part of ITSO (IT Strategies from Oracle) and is associated with Enterprise Technology Strategies (ETS) and Meta-Models (sorry…no acronym…).

Confused yet? No problem, just realize that Oracle is trying to do most of the heavy lifting and provide your organization with a complete software engineering model which you can use.

OFRA classifies all of the core elements for building and managing effective business software. Designed to be software-agnostic it can be of tremendous value in helping organizations improve their IT quality.

Next steps are to get your Enterprise Architects reading up on OFRA so your organization can leverage this great architectural information.

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Oracle BRM Roadmap

October 14th, 2009 by Robert McMillen • No Comments »

In a session yesterday Oracle executives discussed the planned futures for Communications Billing and Revenue Management.

The latest release of CBRM, 7.4, has now been out about 3 weeks. There are now 300 implementations of CBRM in 56 countries. In 2009 Oracle added 32 net new customers with CBRM.

Looking forward to the next 3 years CBRM will increasingly become part of the Fusion Applications Suite beginning with Fusion Pricing (12 months), Fusion Charging (18 months) and Fusion Billing (30 months).

Plans include replacing the CBRM Pipeline product with a single rating engine for both batch and real-time. Performance improvements will rely on Oracle’s Coherence product.

Oracle also noted that CBRM has Gartner’s highest rating in its product space.

With the move to the Fusion architecture we can expect the increased use of ADF, SOA and Web Services in place of the current CBRM GUI, opcodes and FLists.

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Oracle VM Version 2.2 is Now Available

October 13th, 2009 by Robert McMillen • No Comments »

One of my favorite Oracle products is Oracle Virtual Machine (OVM) which allows me to run multiple virtual servers on a single physical server.  In my case that is a loaded DELL 2950 server which supports 8 Virtual Servers we have configured for testing, development and evaluation.  I have created several server configurations and saved them as templates.  When I need a new one I just create a new Virtual Machine and select the appropriate template.  Oracle also provides several templates that you can work with as well.

The beauty of virtual servers is that they maximize your hardware usage and provide fail-over (when configured).  The new version of Oracle’s server virtualization software features the latest Xen-based, industry-standard hypervisor, Xen 3.4.  Oracle VM supports both Oracle and non-Oracle applications and the new version is advertised to offer new CPU power management, memory management, and direct disk I/O capabilities.

Oracle VM 2.2 provides updated support for the Oracle Cluster File System (OCFS2) 1.4 to leverage advanced features such as sparse file support to enable faster virtual machine provisioning and cloning, and to allow users more control over file data allocation, improving performance and storage efficiency.  It also adds direct support for multipath storage devices.
If you are looking for more information I encourage you to read about it HERE.

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Oracle Appliances – Taking Another Look

October 12th, 2009 by Robert McMillen • 2 Comments »

A recurring theme in most sessions by Oracle are their plans to move to creating hardware/software appliances that match their software and SUN hardware to provide a plug and play installation of products.  I’ve noted this briefly in a previous post and wanted to return to it because it raises interesting issues.

Oracle’s justification for appliances is that by controlling the hardware/software configuration at the source, they can provide a more consistent and higher quality installation for clients.  The repeatedly refer to the Apple model and how it provides additional simplicity and more satisfaction for Apple customers.  The other benefit they see is that they can specially tune the solutions to provide higher performance.

This rationale behind this approach makes some significant assumptions.

One assumption is that the needs of a retail user and an organization are very similar and that Oracle will significantly improve customer satisfaction with appliances.  I would question whether a business can specify its needs well enough that Oracle can accurately configure their new appliance effectively.  It is fairly easy to select components such as database version, application version, and middleware version.  What is more complex is configuring this for use in a specific production environment that is dependent on customizations, reports, integrations, varying user loads and unexpected application configuration settings.  All of these would seem to call for additional configuration.  If the client’s staff did not do the initial installation how will they know enough to do these changes?

A second assumption is that initial setup and configuration is a large issue to businesses.  Perhaps for smaller organizations with limited staff that might be the case.  However most organizations struggle not with initial setup and configuration but final configuration when they are going into production which is after much data conversion, system testing and user acceptance testing.

A third assumption is that configuring a multi-tier, multi-server environment can be done well before client delivery.  It’s one thing to get an Apple laptop configured for easy use but much more complex to configure three database servers with RAC, and dual Middleware servers with failover capabilities.

Perhaps the reason these assumptions might not apply is  that Oracle is not assuming that the client staff will do any configuration and that instead Oracle will remotely manage and configure these same appliances.  That’s a possibility but will raise a number of issues for clients who might feel uneasy about Oracle being remotely  in charge of their environment configuration.

Another reason is that I may be over-estimating the level of configuration that Oracle is contemplating.  However, their use of the word “tuning” implies more than just installation and basic setup of a system before delivery.

Knowing Oracle, they will deliver on this vision, so the real question is how will it change the marketplace when they do?  At this point there is much more to understand but the entire Oracle ecosphere of Partners, Competitors and Customers should be considering the impacts and what it will mean to their business.

Stay tuned…

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IPod for the Enterprise – Oracle’s Vision

October 11th, 2009 by Robert McMillen • 1 Comment »

This afternoon the President of Oracle, Charles Phillips, spoke on Oracle’s strategy for providing solutions that are Complete, Open and Integrated.  With plans to wrap up the SUN acquisition, Oracle is clearly focusing on vertically integrating their products using SUN hardware.

Looking to the Apple model, Oracle sees the opportunity to leverage the SUN hardware and their software to improve the quality and performance of the end product.  With the ability to tune the applications from the disk up through the database and middleware, Oracle believes they can build pre-integrated application appliances with exceptional performance.

The big announcement today was about the new SUN Exadata system with performance that exceeds IBM’s current TPC-C results. The challenge for Oracle will be navigating the existing partner relationships and convincing customers that this change in paradigm is worthwhile.  With SUN in their arsenal, Oracle will have to continue to maintain relationships with IBM, HP, DELL and other hardware vendors.

LarryEllison Speaks

In one session today Larry Ellison spent a lot of time being critical of IBM because of IBM’s attempts to take advantage of the uncertainty by SUN customers.  Larry’s comments highlighted the problems that Oracle will be creating as they make SUN their preferred hardware platform and work to tune it to work best with their software. The old saying is that when you fix one problem, you often create another.

It will remain to be seen if Oracle’s strategy to build hardware/software appliances will be popular with customers.  Clearly it will be a hard pill for the hardware vendors to swallow.

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Can You Trust the Crowd?

October 11th, 2009 by Robert McMillen • No Comments »

One of the interesting sessions today was by Andrew McAfee from MIT, discussing Enterprise 2.0.  His research is focused on social software platforms like Twitter, Blogging, Discussion Forums, etc.  He started by discussing human altruism and why in a net-based social environment, individuals will choose to help others with their questions.

As an example he told of a personal situation where he was unable to get his key to work on a rental car.  Using Twitter, he sent out a message looking for solutions and within 15 minutes had over a dozen solutions proposed.  His belief is that we will jump in to help others because it makes us feel good about sharing our expertise and because the internet provides such a low barrier to helping others.

Based on his research he had these recommendations for organizations looking to improve their collaboration and knowledge-base and effectiveness using Web 2.0 social software:

1. Stop obsessing about the possible negatives upfront
2. Reduce the barriers to altruism via the net
3. Use tools that let structure arise naturally rather than enforcing it at the front
4. Focus on involvement not structure
5. Allow the wisdom of the crowd to work.  The collective intelligence is very accurate over time.
6. Build communities that provide status indicators for regular contributors
7. Don’t try to replace email and the Inbox
8. Focus on building knowledge relationships, not just collaboration

One of his examples for the wisdom of the crowd was that social network systems more accurately predicted the final electoral college results in the past election than any set of polls or expert opinions.

He strongly recommends that businesses leverage these new social tools for the benefits they offer.  These tools can improve knowledge transfer, build relationships, improve problem solving, recognize expertise, aggregate organizational knowledge and improve training for new employees.

The real key, in his opinion, is to avoid over-controlling the environment and to provide the right incentives for participation.

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Paranoid About Losing Your Laptop?

October 7th, 2009 by Robert McMillen • No Comments »

With most of us using laptops as our desktops, a loss is significant.    While I do regular backups and have MOZY running as well it would be a real hassle if I had my laptop stolen.   But there may be hope out there for those who are like me.

I’ve recently read about and then installed a new product that helps track your laptop when it is stolen.  It uses a light-weight application along with a web site login to help you identify your laptop when and if it ever is is stolen and then connects to an IP address. While there are other products like this, the one I’m speaking about is open-source and free.  Plus it is very simple to setup.

The product is called PREY and you can read more about it on their website at www.preyproject.com.

If you are interested, I’ve created a detailed set of Instructions on how to install PREY .  You can download the PDF file from Installing PREY on Windows XP.

Prey  supports Windows, Linux and Mac’s which is great.  It can also be loaded on desktops if you are concerned about them.  The current version allows you to track up to 3 devices per login.  So how does it work.  After you install the software you configure it via a login at Prey’s website.

If you lose your PC you merely visit the website and login.  Then select the device you want to track and change the settings to indicate it is lost.  It will then send a report about the device including IP address, etc..

In my situation PREY had problems sending back pictures using the built-in laptop camera but that may be a configuration issue outside of PREY .

The one gotcha is that when you install it, you cannot obfuscate the name of the product, so anyone recognizing the name can easily disable it.  I attempted to do a work-around and change the names to something else, but it disabled the program.  Still this is a very good product to consider.

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