Softwar: An Intimate Portrait of Larry Ellison and Oracle
Rate it:
Open Preview
Read between December 2, 2020 - February 20, 2023
1%
Flag icon
hoopla
1%
Flag icon
digression:
2%
Flag icon
bestrode
2%
Flag icon
paradigm
3%
Flag icon
If you can use Yahoo! or Amazon without any training, you should be able to use most business software with little or no training.
3%
Flag icon
‘burn rate,’
3%
Flag icon
“plain vanilla”
4%
Flag icon
blasé
4%
Flag icon
tarmac
4%
Flag icon
extol
4%
Flag icon
perplexed
4%
Flag icon
soliloquy
4%
Flag icon
The mayor suddenly asks what Oracle can do to put the city’s customs operations online.
5%
Flag icon
lowballing
6%
Flag icon
contortions
6%
Flag icon
Adroitly,
6%
Flag icon
piously.
6%
Flag icon
there’s a need to link an individual’s records from different academic institutions to create a single lifetime learning record to support accountability and validate credentials.
6%
Flag icon
altruism.
6%
Flag icon
Ellison needs to say something funny: “The good news is that our E-Business Suite is brand new. The bad news is that our E-Business Suite is brand new.”
6%
Flag icon
“take-no-prisoners”
6%
Flag icon
macho
6%
Flag icon
sprawling
6%
Flag icon
unencumbered
6%
Flag icon
verging
7%
Flag icon
It’s an opportunity for Ellison to do what he does best—inspire, flatter, amuse, and, finally, steamroller skepticism with his own massive certainty.
7%
Flag icon
The core of his business philosophy is that you can’t get rich by doing the same thing as everyone else.
7%
Flag icon
wheezy,
7%
Flag icon
raison d’être
7%
Flag icon
The Road Ahead
7%
Flag icon
christened
8%
Flag icon
newfangled
8%
Flag icon
aqueduct
8%
Flag icon
Moore’s Law
8%
Flag icon
epiphany.
8%
Flag icon
pernicious
8%
Flag icon
Software from different vendors will have different semantics—even something as simple as defining what a “customer” is may differ—different underlying data schemas, which have to be coordinated but will scarcely ever be fully reconciled, and different user interfaces with conflicting design conventions and display elements.
8%
Flag icon
Even if the consultants have a proven integration method to link two pieces of software, APIs (application program interfaces) still have to be specially constructed to pass messages among distinct database schemas, limiting the amount of information that can be extracted as well as duplicating storage requirements.
9%
Flag icon
Our customer data was fragmented into four hundred separate customer databases. Worse still, it was just about impossible to combine the customer data into a data warehouse because the customer data was not consistent across all those separate operational databases.
9%
Flag icon
saddled
9%
Flag icon
“shelfware”
9%
Flag icon
The starting point was to see the database as the hub and the applications as the spokes.
9%
Flag icon
If you draw a picture of Oracle’s application architecture, the database is at the center and the applications are attached around the periphery.
9%
Flag icon
A single global database connected to a single global network—the Internet—is the ideal architecture.”
9%
Flag icon
A further problem was the inclusion into the data model of what are known as “multis”—languages, places, currencies, contact addresses.
9%
Flag icon
“It can’t be simple if it’s not complete” had become Ellison’s latest mantra.
9%
Flag icon
Nirvana,
10%
Flag icon
Even today, most customers split their applications software purchases between the software provider and the system integrator. While the software provider sells the software for a set price, the system integrator will provide only a cost “estimate.” If there is a shortcoming in the software, the systems integrator will charge extra to fix it. These extra charges are typically many times higher than the original estimate. The best way to solve this problem is to make the applications software vendor or the systems integrator unconditionally guarantee the price of the software product and the ...more
10%
Flag icon
hyperbole
10%
Flag icon
Many of Oracle’s 43,000 employees, particularly key developers and those who have been with the company since the mid-1980s, have become multimillionaires thanks to their stock options.
« Prev 1 3 7