Oracle Targets Mid-Tier Market with 10g Standard Edition | eWeek

Oracle Targets Mid-Tier Market with 10g Standard Edition

Écrit par
Brian Fonseca
Brian Fonseca
Feb 3, 2004
3 minute read
eWeek Le contenu et les recommandations de produits sont indépendants de la rédaction. Nous pouvons gagner de l'argent lorsque vous cliquez sur des liens vers nos partenaires. En savoir plus

Acknowledging its intentions to scoop up smaller database customers who may have shied away from pricey Oracle entry points, Oracle Corp. on Tuesday slashed the price of its entry-level product. The company was buoyed by the release of its long-anticipated Oracle 10g database and offered clustering and managment options.

During a conference call, the software company said a Linux version of Oracle 10g database is currently shipping in conjunction with 64-bit Solaris and HP-UX support. A Microsoft Windows OS version is still a few weeks away, noted Oracle officials.

Executives said the pricing for Oracle Database 10g Standard Edition One dropped to $4,995 per processor down from $5,995. The product is available with Named User Plus licensing at $149 per user with a minimum of five years, a $50 decrease from its prior $195 per user perch.

In addition, the Standard Editions maximum server capacity was boosted to two processors, noted Jacqueline Woods, vice president of global practices, global pricing and licensing strategy for the Redwood Shores, Calif.-based Oracle.

Industry watchers said pricing moves on the low end of a product line are always directly linked to competitive factors. In this case, the move is primarily caused by jostling from Microsoft Corp. and IBM Corp. in the low-end database arena. Thereby, the lower Standard Edition One pricing give Oracle a chance to finally undercut Microsoft SQL Servers penetration into its enterprise customer base, said analyst Carl Olofson of International Data Corp. of Framingham, Mass.

“Businesses that are putting an IT system together from scratch are just not ready to write out new checks,” Olofson said. “Up until now, Microsoft has been able to get in on the bottom beneath Oracle and cut off that growth pattern for them. It seems to me, at least as an initial entry point, price doesnt look like a barrier [anymore] and that has to be good news for Oracle and its partners.”

/zimages/3/28571.gifOracle may be making agressive steps into the midmarket. However, Microsoft and its partners took aim after the announcement today, asking if Oracle can play nice with resellers, ISVs and integrators in the space.Click hereto read more.

Further extending an olive branch to the smaller-to-mid-tiered audience, Oracle on Tuesday said its Real Application Clusters (RAC) 10g option will be included in Oracle Database Standard Edition at no additional charge. The stand-alone cost remains unchanged at $15,000 per processor. The maximum server capacity in a cluster is 4-Processors in a cluster, meaning customers can run dual two-way nodes, or four one-way nodes, etc.

There is no pricing change associated with Oracle Database Enterprise Edition, which costs $40,000 per processor and $800 per name user with a minimum of 40 users.

Oracle is adding a new Configuration Management Pack to its Enterprise Manager family, which includes Diagnostics, Tuning, and Change Management. The packs are sold at $3,000 per processor. In addition, the software behemoth released a Diagnostics Pack and a Configuration Management Pack for Oracle Application Server 10G, also priced at $3,000 per processor.

/zimages/3/28571.gif

eWeek Logo

eWeek has the latest technology news and analysis, buying guides, and product reviews for IT professionals and technology buyers. The site's focus is on innovative solutions and covering in-depth technical content. eWeek stays on the cutting edge of technology news and IT trends through interviews and expert analysis. Gain insight from top innovators and thought leaders in the fields of IT, business, enterprise software, startups, and more.

Propriété de TechnologyAdvice. © 2026 TechnologyAdvice. Tous droits réservés

Divulgation publicitaire : Certains des produits qui apparaissent sur ce site proviennent d'entreprises dont TechnologyAdvice reçoit une compensation. Cette compensation peut influencer la façon dont les produits apparaissent sur ce site, notamment l'ordre dans lequel ils apparaissent. TechnologyAdvice n'inclut pas toutes les entreprises ou tous les types de produits disponibles sur le marché.