Manufacturing Computer Solutions - The definitive it guide for UK manufacturers
 
 
Site Search :   Search Help   login

Oracle Beehive and HP database machine set OpenWorld buzzing 25/09/2008
 
As more than one wag quipped, things were buzzing at Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco this week, following the launch of Oracle Beehive.



Terry Olkin, chief architect and vice president, Oracle Server Technology, described it as a comprehensive, open-standards-based enterprise collaboration platform, designed to deliver integrated team workspaces, calendar, instant messaging and e-mail.

“Oracle Beehive is the first truly integrated collaboration platform that understands diverse modes of collaboration through a unified object model,” he said. “Beehive’s robust security model and an open, integrated and extensible set of collaboration services will transform the way organizations collaborate.”

Unravelling that, it’s about enabling manufacturing companies and others to secure communications and add collaboration right into their existing business processes and applications. It’s also about helping users to do so while simplifying their computing environments, cutting cost and risk, and improving flexibility, according to the company.

Olkin explained that, by using a unified object model and taking advantage of the security capabilities in the Oracle Database, Beehive provides a centralised, secure and auditable collaboration platform that works, right out to ensuring regulatory compliance.

Add that to the database giant’s introduction of the HP Oracle Database Machine, delivering a claimed tenfold increase in performance compared with current Oracle data warehouses, and it’s clear that the organisation still believes there’s mileage in building a better mousetrap.

It’s probably right, too: with data rates and quantities still escalating, the market for extreme performance data warehouses is almost certainly growing.

So providing a grid of Oracle database servers with a grid of the new Oracle Exadata storage servers, all packaged in a single rack, will sound attractive to many.

Particularly when you hear that the order of magnitude speed hike is achieved by shipping less data through larger pipes – and that no changes are required to your existing queries or business intelligence applications to deliver that extreme performance.
 
Author
Brian Tinham
 
Email this article
 
Bookmark this article using:
 
Del.icio.us digg reddit Facebook StumbleUpon
 
News Item
Linked Companies
 
 Oracle Corporation UK Ltd
 
 
News Item
Similar News Articles
 
  UK’s most powerful supercomputer starts work at AWE
 
  SAP’s in-memory computing to change face of real time business intelligence
 
  Half of organisations expect cloud to enable creativity and growth
 
  Fifty percent of firms say cloud computing improves security
 
  HP helps manufacturers break IT improvement gridlock
 
 
News Item
Similar Reference Zone Articles
 
  Being able to say 'Yes'
 
  Always on?
 
  Who grasps virtual space
 
  Horses for courses in today’s race for storage
 
  Disk-to-disk-to-tape takes 80% off back-up times