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LINUXWORLD, SAN FRANCISCO,
10-AUG-2005 04:09 PM
Extending its leadership and
longstanding commitment to Linux, Oracle today announced that its Oracle(r) On Demand
services and Oracle Data Center are now powered by the x86 64-bit architecture. Oracle E-
Business Suite On Demand and Oracle Technology On Demand customers, such as Thermos,
Cabot Microelectronics, Tropicana and UNOCAL Corporation, benefit from the high-
performance, reliability and security provided by Oracle software on a low-cost, Linux platform.
Oracle provides support for the Linux operating system, makes technical contributions to
the Linux kernel, and has forged strategic partnerships with hardware vendors and Linux
distributors. At Oracle's world-class Data Center, Oracle On Demand customers have mission-
critical, transactional applications deployed and managed on AMD-64-based Sun back-end
systems running Novell's SUSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES). Oracle On Demand simplifies
enterprise computing by eliminating the headache of handling software upgrades, patches, and
day-to-day maintenance. Oracle On Demand customers have access to the latest capabilities and pay a predictable, monthly fee.
"As the leading enterprise software vendor driving adoption of the Linux platform,
Oracle continues to test and deploy software on the latest architectures to give our customers all
of the cost and performance advantages it delivers," said Juergen Rottler, executive vice
president, Oracle On Demand and Support Services. "By building our own IT systems on Linux,
we help our customers realize first-hand the business benefits as well as the lower IT costs
associated with using Linux in an x86 64-bit operating environment."
Oracle Leads with Linux
Since introducing the first database to run on Linux in 1998, Oracle has been committed to
furthering Linux adoption across the enterprise. According to Gartner's recently released
relational database management system (RDBMS) market share results for 2004, Linux is the
fastest growing platform with 118 percent growth and Oracle is the top database on Linux with 81
percent market share.1
Support has been a hallmark of the Oracle-Linux organization since June 2002 when
Oracle began providing integrated support for the entire software platform, including the
operating system. Currently, customers from around the globe tap into Oracle's global team for
24/7 technical support for Linux. Oracle also has a Linux Kernel Group dedicated to working
with Linux vendors and developers to provide fixes and develop new functionality to benefit the
Linux community.
About Oracle
Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) is the world's largest enterprise software company. For more
information about Oracle, visit our Web site at http://www.oracle.com.
1 1 Gartner Dataquest, "No Clear Winner in Overall RDBMS Market Share Race," by Colleen
Graham.
May 23, 2005
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