This is good news for people like myself, whose entire professional career is centered around Oracle technologies. As many of you know, I'm a big supporter of both Oracle and its technologies, and if I didn't believe in their products, I wouldn't be working on them.
However, my issue though is the title of the press release:
Oracle Fusion Middleware 11g Sets Record Performance for a 4-Processor System and Achieves Highest Performance Per Core with SPECjEnterprise2010 BenchmarkIt's misleading. Last I heard, Oracle Fusion Middleware 11g consists of over 30 products (and now hardware) within areas of Business Intelligence to Collaboration to Data Integration to Service-Oriented Architecture. The subheading to the press release fortunately clarifies things a little better:
Oracle WebLogic Server 11g Running on Dell Beats IBM WebSphere on a Similar ConfigurationIt's confusing enough for those customers out there who don't know what the heck you're referring to when you say "Oracle Fusion Middleware". So although I do appreciate Oracle trying to promote this single application infrastructure foundation, in reality, most customers only use a subset of its products and get confused with the constant reference to the term "Oracle Fusion Middleware".
1 comment:
Hi,
I read your post which is about oracle fussion middleware 11g.Your site cleared my confusion for regarding the record performance.Thanks a lot
Oracle Managed Services.
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