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To: spitsong who wrote (31780)1/11/2002 4:09:41 PM
From: Alomex  Read Replies (2) of 213182
 
Of course it chose not to renew that agreement, and Sybase has been crippled ever since.

The two facts are somewhat independent. In fact the Microsoft deal gave access to a database originally developed by Watcom which was purchased by Powersoft which was then purchased by Sybase. This deal was never the bread and butter of Sybase.

Somewhat independently, the database market went through a major consolidation in which a lot of minor players disappeared or shrinked radically, including dBase, Paradox, Fox (owned by M$), Informix, Sybase among others.

This consolidation had more to do with the lack of need for yet another corporate database and the raise of the computer as a word processor. IMHO Oracle was saved by the appearance of the dynamic web page, which is usually implemented using a database in the back end.

Here's a bit of trivia: the original SQL Anywhere (later licensed to M$) was written over a month by two programmers just for kicks. It was smaller and faster than anything else out there, although admittedly a bit less feature rich. That is why Sybase targeted the embedded space with this server, as this market that doesn't need as many features.
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