Hewlett-Packard and Oracle executives reportedly failed for a second time to settle their legal dispute over Intels Itanium platform, and the trial between the two resumed this week in a California courthouse.
A two-day recess in the trial was called to allow for HP and Oracle officials to try to settle their differences, according to a report by Reuters. Quoting an unnamed source, the news site said that Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge James Kleinberg, who is running the trial, had urged the two companies to meet with Judge Brian Walsh for another round of settlement talks.
Walsh reportedly had overseen similar talks in May, which also failed to create an agreement.
With no settlement reached, the trial, which began June 4, resumed June 13. At issue is whether Oracle violated a contract with HP when officials last year announced that the enterprise software giant would no longer support Intels Itanium chips platform, which powers HPs high-end Integrity and NonStop server lines. HP and Oracle share about 140,000 customers, many of whom run Oracles enterprise applicationsincluding database softwareon HPs Itanium-based servers.
The crux of the disagreement is an agreement that was reached in 2010, after HP filed suit following Oracles hiring of ex-HP CEO Mark Hurd as president. HP claims that in the written settlement of the lawsuit, Oracle agreed to continue supporting technologies used by joint customers, including the high-end Itanium-based systems. However, Oracle executives claim that the paragraph at issue in the settlement is not a binding contract.
Oracle officials said they ended software development for Itanium after being told by Intel engineers that the chip giant was planning to shut down Itanium development. Both HP and Intel disputed the claim, saying that Itanium road maps run through much of the rest of the decade.
HP officials argued that Oracles move was made in hopes of harming HPs high-end server business and convincing joint HP and Oracle customers to migrate their workloads to the SPARC/Solaris systems, which Oracle inherited when it bought Sun Microsystems in 2010. Oracle executives accused HP of lying to customers and the industry about the future of Itanium, saying HP paid Intel more that $488 million to keep the platform alive.
HP, which has seen its Business Critical Systems (BCS) group take a revenue hit since the Oracle decision, wants the courts to order Oracle to continue supporting Itanium and pay $4 billion in damages. The BCS group saw its revenue drop 23 percent in the first quarter. HP executives blame the drop on the Oracle case, though analystswhile agreeing that Oracles move has hurt HPalso have noted that sales of Unix-based systems industry-wide have fallen.
Some businesses using HPs Itanium-based systems have said they are looking around at alternatives, particularly in light of the upcoming release later this year or early next of Oracles 12c database, which will be the first not to support Itanium. Oracle is not the only major software maker to abandon Itanium; its decision followed similar ones by Microsoft and Red Hat.
During testimony June 13, jurors reportedly heard from Timothy Aylott, a software executive with HP who spoke about Oracles work in the past to migrate its software to HP-UX, HPs Unix variant. They also heard from Martin Fink, senior vice president of HPs BSC unit, who testified on the importance of Oracles software to HPs high-end Itanium systems. Fink reportedly is expected to continue testifying June 14.