Compared to his typical spiel, Ellison kept the competitor bashing to
a minimum during his keynote speech, with one major exception. He
showed a slide that said that the new Oracle server is twice as fast and
three times cheaper than IBM's server.
The problem is that Oracle has already been busted three times for advertising campaigns claiming that Oracle's servers are faster, better, or cheaper than IBM's.
IBM has complained about these ads to the advertising industry's
self-regulation body, the National Advertising Division, and NAB has
consistently sided with IBM and told Oracle to change the ads.
When IBM asked NAB to look into the truth of a fourth campaign, NAB
threw up its hands and asked The Federal Trade Commission to investigate
Oracle's ads for "possible law enforcement action," it said last month.
To be fair, the latest comparison wasn't technically an ad. It was a slide in Ellison's keynote presentation.
And also to be fair, IBM is a master at complaining to various regulatory agencies to thwart its competitors. That's how it stopped Amazon from winning a game-changing cloud deal with the CIA worth $600 million. Oracle told us in August that it stands by its ads.
On Monday, IBM sent us this response to Ellison's slide:
"Much like its comparative ads, Oracle's
presentation failed to provide details on the cost-comparison, which
must be analyzed to determine the validity of Oracle's assertion. Oracle
has a history of making grandiose claims that are unsubstantiated, but
knowing what we have seen in prior comparisons, it would be important to
look at exactly what is included in the cost: How much storage and what
type was included, what type of maintenance and support was added in,
were the very expensive Oracle software licenses added in?"
Meanwhile, Oracle's oldest, biggest rival, SAP, also went on the
offensive. One of the products Oracle announced last night was a pretty
amazing "in-memory" feature for its latest database, Oracle 12c. The
feature instantly makes the database work at least 100 times faster,
Ellison says.
The feature offers an alternative for Oracle customers considering ditching Oracle for SAP's HANA in-memory database.
No sooner had Ellison left the stage, than SAP sent us this response
to his keynote about the new competitor to HANA, noting that SAP founder
and chairman Hasso Plattner launched HANA about two years ago:
"It's great to hear Larry singing from
Hasso Plattner's playbook, but Oracle is still missing the mark. They
are still trying to make queries run faster but missed the chance to
simplify the data management at the same time. SAP HANA has been
delivering real-time performance to our customers in real world
environments for years."
All of this said, Oracle is putting together a compelling set of
products for companies that use the Oracle database, and that's a lot of
companies. Oracle has owned about half the database market share, by revenue, for years.
By: Julie Bort
Link: http://www.businessinsider.com/sap-and-ibm-respond-to-oracles-claims-2013-9
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