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To: David Meyer who wrote (12752)1/6/1999 10:59:00 PM
From: SKIP PAUL  Respond to of 14631
 
Informix could be up again tomorrow. Oracle slips:

Oracle behind the 8i ball
By Wylie Wong
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
January 6, 1999, 12:40 p.m. PT

Oracle has postponed shipment of Oracle 8i until the end of
February so it can perform final tests and complete the integration
of software and development tools with the Internet-centric
database.

Oracle originally hoped to release the highly touted database by
the end of 1998, but a two-month delay allows the company to
make sure everything works together, said Jeremy Burton, Oracle's
vice president of server marketing.

"It's like with any kind of software. You shoot for a date, and it's
been a two-year plus development for Oracle. We thought we
could hit our date, but the big thing here is we're getting all our
planets aligned," he said.

The database code has been completed and frozen, but Burton said
Oracle developers need to ensure the Oracle Application Server,
Oracle Applications, and the company's new Java development
tool called JDeveloper 2.0 work well with Oracle 8i. The
company is still
testing WebDB, a new tool built into the database to enable
software to run entirely within a Web browser, he said.

Oracle hopes to capitalize on the Internet frenzy with 8i, with chief
executive Larry Ellison calling it the only technology a business
needs to deploy applications that are accessible through the
Internet. Oracle 8i includes several new technologies, including a
built-in Java
Virtual Machine to run Java application code and an "Internet File
System" to store and manage Web pages, word processing files,
spreadsheets, and multimedia data.

Analysts say Oracle is smart to delay a product that isn't ready,
even if it might make the company look bad for missing its original
release date.

"It's good they're trying to have no major problems before
they send it out. It's an important sign of discipline in the
software industry," said analyst Frank Gillett, of Forrester
research, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. "Too much software ships
and customers have to apply bug fixes". Just look at the revs of
Microsoft NT and the service packs that go out."

Gillett said Oracle learned a good lesson from Sybase,
whose release of its System 10 database several years ago
disappointed its customers. "They put out System 10 and said,
'here's the greatest version,' and customers had problems with it,"
he said. "Sybase only succeeded in winning back their trust a year
or two ago."

Analyst Merv Adrian, of Giga Information Group, in Cambridge,
Massachusetts, agrees, saying users should not be concerned with
the two-month delay.

"It's to be expected for a major release that has as many substantial
fundamental technology changes as Oracle 8i," he said. "When you
start adding support for fundamental [Internet] protocols, these
kind of changes are not trivial."



To: David Meyer who wrote (12752)1/7/1999 9:06:00 AM
From: Mort  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 14631
 
Could you please give me the site address fo after hours trading.

Thanks in advance.