Amazon, Google and Microsoft invest billions in their own data centers and hardware. They have it down to a science. They have dedicated teams of engineers onsite in their own data centers to keep everything running smoothly with quick and efficient response times. Hard drives are attached with Velcro because it takes too long to screw them in. When a customer signs up they can scale globally within minutes.
Contrast this with Oracle, when I was asked by a customer how long they would have to wait on the Exadata cloud service to be ready if they signed a contract today I had to reach out to the installation team to get a response. At the time (2017) Oracle had no spare capacity. I assume this is still true. I had to tell the customer the truth. It would take 6 weeks to build the Exadata machines, drop ship them to the rented data center and network them. Oh and by the way they had to buy double the capacity so they could fail over between availability zones, and pay extra for active data guard per core so they could atleast read from the standby data centers. It was an obscene cost and a ridiculous lead time. I left Oracle shortly after this conversation. It was clear to me that Oracle is putting little investment in its only stated hope for survival.
Oracle rents data centers and invests in hardware when a customer makes a purchase. When Oracle gets serious and its expands its data centers its all leased, all of it. It's not a serious commitment, their investment is leased and should Oracle decide cloud was a bad idea, like running hardware was with Sun, Oracle could shut it all down tomorrow.
The idea that Oracle can be a serious contender in cloud demonstrates a complete lack of understanding at the executive level. The executives at Oracle have no idea what cloud really is. It was so bad that after 22 years of service, TK the president of Oracle resigned on Oct 2, 2018 frustration and went to Google.
Oracle tried to pivot to the cloud and made some "serious" attempts since 2016. The executive belief is that they can win cloud with superior software. Lets analyze the insanity. What does this software run on? It runs on hardware that takes a 6 week lead time. What customer is going to wait for this? Oracle refuses to invest in the hardware necessary to make this a 5 minute lead time like the rest of the cloud providers.
They are hard at work rolling out their "superior software" in their next gen cloud. They have abandoned their first version of cloud, and the customers that run on it have no easy upgrade path. Its only been two years since 2017. Amazon has over two decades of software development in their cloud. 2 years against 20. Oracle hired engineers from Amazon, true but it really hasn't been enough time to battle test it.
Oracle lacks core features like routing. Amazon Route 53 is a highly available and scalable cloud Domain Name System (DNS) web service. Oracle bought Dyn to help with DNS routing then laid most of the employees off. As far as I know they have no real answer to the problems solved by Amazon Route 53.
There is no comparison between Amazon and Oracle's cloud. The feature gap on the software side a lone is staggering. Oracle executives really believe they are rolling out something that will compete with amazon in the gen2 cloud right now. Its not even in the same ballpark. The feature gap in software between Oracle and Amazon cloud software is immense. Its about as big as the infrastructure gap.
The CO CEO at Oracle that is out on medical leave was never known as an innovator. He was known for cutting costs. What remains is a fractured executive team with no real understanding of cloud. Its a feeble attempt at best with no investment in building data centers or buying hardware.
All I can say is that this strategy has no chance of success. If you have any understanding of what cloud is and you continue on this path of not putting in software features, not owning your own data centers with dedicated teams on engineers onsite, not buying hardware and having in networked before the customer buys, you have to be insane if you think you will succeed.
https://www.datacenterknowledge.com/oracle/oracle-cloud-puts-data-center-expansion-pedal-metal
After years of watching its largest rivals in cloud services spend billions of dollars on infrastructure quarterly – while keeping its own data center investment relatively modest – Oracle’s cloud business is accelerating expansion.
The company announced on Monday a plan to add 20 new cloud availability regions to the existing 16 by the end of next year. The plan includes new Oracle cloud data centers in countries across the Americas, Europe, Middle East, and Asia-Pacific.
wait for it... this was posted 5 days ago...
Unlike its largest rivals Amazon, Microsoft, and Google, who both design and build their own data centers in addition to leasing facilities from specialist developers, Oracle is planning to continue relying on the latter exclusively, Leo Leung, senior director of product and strategy for Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, told Data Center Knowledge in an interview.
rewind....
Unlike its largest rivals Amazon, Microsoft, and Google, who both design and build their own data centers in addition to leasing facilities from specialist developers
Oracle is planning to continue relying on the latter exclusively
the latter is leasing facilities from specialist developers
Correct statement
Oracle is planning to continue relying on leasing facilities from specialist developers exclusively
In the midst of this Oracle is letting its largest support base of installed on premise products "Melt away" as they focus on cloud. This means a decline in support revenue that keeps the company alive.
I would expect some serious reckoning in the near future, and that does not bode well for employees. Oracle has laid off in the good times and we have seen the reports here, what will it do in the bad times as support revenue shrinks and the next gen cloud fails to bring in revenue for the reasons listed above?