Monday, April 27, 2009

The biggest losers in the Oracle, Sun deal

The identity management persepective of the Oracle, Sun deal
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Spotlight Story
The biggest losers in the Oracle, Sun deal

Dave Kearns By Dave Kearns
Last week was the annual RSA Conference, which was the reason for lots and lots of press releases being, well, released. Unfortunately (depending on your point of view), most of them got overlooked because two Silicon Valley "legends-in-their-own-time" shook hands on a blockbuster deal as Oracle agreed to purchase Sun. Read full story

Dave Kearns is a consultant and editor of IdM, the Journal of Identity Management.

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Podcast: Is Sun's future bright under Oracle? Oracle's $7.4 billion bid for Sun has analysts talking, and not all of them see the move as a smart one. Voke analyst Theresa Lanowitz explains how and where Oracle’s acquisition of Sun could fall flat. (12:01)

Sun ties identity software to Google Apps Premier, Amazon cloud platform Sun Wednesday tied its identity federation software to Google Apps and added its directory and Web application server to the cloud platform it is building for developers to build and test applications.

Oracle-Sun union means tough decisions on ID management Oracle will have to make some significant product decisions and integration plans to address the overlap it has with Sun in terms of identity management software, according to experts.

Oracle agrees to buy Sun for $7.4B Oracle has signed a deal to purchase Sun for $7.4 billion, plunging the enterprise software vendor into the hardware market and making Sun the latest company to be subsumed by the Silicon Valley giant.

Oracle's Sun buy: Ellison praises Solaris, snubs IBM Oracle may have decided to buy Sun because it was worth far more to the database market leader than it was to IBM. It's not a question of the price - at $7.4 billion, Oracle didn't agree to pay much more than what IBM reportedly was considering. But Oracle may have more use for Sun's technology than IBM ever did.

IBM renews Oracle-migration efforts with database upgrade IBM on Wednesday released Version 9.7 of its flagship DB2 database with several notable new features, including the ability to run applications written for other databases, especially Oracle's.

Users: Oracle has lots of questions to answer about Sun deal Oracle's planned acquisition of Sun Microsystems Inc. is raising questions among users on, well, just about every aspect of the deal.

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Why Traditional IT Management Fails
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04/27/09

Today's most-read stories:

  1. Some IT skills see pay hikes during downturn
  2. Researchers show how to take control of Windows 7
  3. The evolution of Ethernet
  4. Intel CPU cache poisoning: dangerously easy on Linux
  5. The downfall of Sun
  6. Einstein systems to inspect U.S. government's Internet traffic
  7. Microsoft posts historic revenue stumble in quarterly earnings
  8. Apple dismisses netbook trend
  9. Cloud computing a 'security nightmare,' says Cisco CEO
  10. Top 10 technology skills
  11. Notebook replaces trackpad with LCD panel


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