Thread regarding Oracle Corp. layoffs

LE Rocks the Cloud: Oracle OCI on $2-Billion Run Rate

https://cloudwars.co/oracle/larry-ellison-cloud-oracle-oci-2-billion-run-rate-growing-100-percent/

Larry Ellison’s stunning disclosure that Oracle now has a $2-billion cloud-infrastructure business with a triple-digit growth rate turns Oracle from a tough-talking but unproven fringe player into a high-performance player worthy of being seen as a legitimate peer of industry leaders Microsoft, Amazon and Google.

(On my weekly Cloud Wars Top 10 rankings, Oracle is #6, Microsoft is #1, Amazon is #2, and Google is #3.)

And, says Ellison, the best is yet to come.

First, here’s how he framed the infrastructure business in yesterday’s press release disclosing quarterly financial results:

“Once again in Q3, Oracle’s Gen2 Cloud Infrastructure business added customers, and grew revenue at a rate in excess of 100%,” said Oracle Chairman and CTO, Larry Ellison. “We are opening new regions as fast as we can to support our rapidly growing multi-billion dollar infrastructure business.”

And then on yesterday afternoon’s fiscal-Q3 earnings call, CEO Safra Catz stated that Oracle’s infrastructure cloud services “now have annualized revenue of more than $2 billion.”

Later on the call, Ellison said revenue for Autonomous Database, which is an OCI service, would “explode” in Oracle’s fiscal 2022, which begins June 1. For Q3, Catz said Autonomous Database revenue was up 55%, so the explosion predicted by Ellison would presumably push that number much higher.

“We see a lot of database acceleration starting next fiscal year,” Ellison said in response to an analyst’s question about the growth outlook for Autonomous Database.

“And we’ll also be fine in Q4—but we expect it really to explode—and I really do mean very rapid growth—next year.”

Then, leaning a bit, well, oracular, Ellison shrouded that forecast in a bit of intrigue. He added, “We’re not ready to disclose our exact plans that will drive that, but we expect very rapid database growth next year.”

In replying to another question about OCI, Ellison emphasized the highly strategic part that its advanced cybersecurity capabilities are playing in helping convince big customers to sign up for Oracle’s cloud infrastructure.

“There are two things that are interesting about OCI on the security front. First, we believe security should always be turned on, that there should be no ‘light switch’ that lets customers turn security features off,” Ellison said.

“In fact, in our Max Security Zone service security is always turned on—you cannot turn it off. You can’t open a network link that puts your infrastructure in danger.

“And the other thing is our focus on autonomous. With Autonomous Linux or Autonomous Database, there’s no human labor involved. And while that means lower costs since there’s no human labor, the most important benefit is that no human labor means no human error.

“With no human labor, you can’t misconfigure a system that leads to a loss of data,” Ellison said.

“For customers, that’s been one of the most attractive attributes of OCI—in addition to great performance and lower price—we do abetter job of securing your data. And that’s been a decisive factor with a lot of ISVs and other customers.”

Final thought
Eight months ago, in a piece called Larry Ellison’s Miracle: Oracle Becomes Big-Time Cloud Infrastructure Player, I concluded with this thought: Oracle might never come close to matching Amazon, Microsoft or Google in IaaS revenue, but Ellison is making damn sure that Oracle’s in the race and forcing the competition to be very, very aware of his presence.

Well, if they weren’t before, they surely are now.

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| 2681 views | | 11 replies (last March 14, 2021) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+19PQ21TA

11 replies (most recent on top)

So, they still didn't separate the cloud revenue out from other revenue, right? In that case, they are still just lying like usual. They have said all kinds of things about cloud revenue in the past, it's just the same as usual. Nothing new happening, except in LE's mind perhaps.

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Post ID: @2hge+19PQ21TA
Automation has furked up before. Systems designed with human involvement always have flaws. We call them: bugs, change requests, Sev Zero down, etc., etc.

People forget that automation is only as reliable and error-free at the one doing the automating. Further, isolating and repairing a flaw in automation is much more complicated than manual

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Post ID: @2ssn+19PQ21TA

I think included in that $2 billion are all fixed assets and inventory in the hardware group.

:P

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Post ID: @1lci+19PQ21TA

“Nothing like honest unbiased articles....“

And this is nothing like that!

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Post ID: @1jgq+19PQ21TA

“With no human labor, you can’t misconfigure a system that leads to a loss of data,” Ellison said.

Automation has furked up before. Systems designed with human involvement always have flaws. We call them: bugs, change requests, Sev Zero down, etc., etc.

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Post ID: @1nzn+19PQ21TA

Nothing like honest unbiased articles....

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Post ID: @1kes+19PQ21TA

Evans was writing for Oracle at Forbes in the past.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/oracle/people/bevans/?sh=47782ec3497c

“Bob Evans is senior vice-president, communications, for Oracle Corp., and reports to CEO Larry Ellison. He’s responsible for helping articulate Oracle’s strategic directions, high-level technology innovations, unique competitive advantages, and the wide range of business value Oracle creates for its customers and partners. Before joining Oracle, he was a long-time tech-industry analyst and commentator as well as content and media executive.”

My guess is that now he is a hired gun still doing the same stuff while no longer reporting to LJE.

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Post ID: @1buz+19PQ21TA

Cloud Wars is a paid ad rag. Just like the paid Forbes articles

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Post ID: @1cld+19PQ21TA

Cloud Wars is a useless, gasbag publication - really just a marketing rag that hypes whatever they are paid to hype. The article that was posted here a week ago was superior, I.e., it described actual customer production implementations. Oracle was down in the noise level, which says that even when customers purchase oracle cloud services, they don’t actually implement anything on them. This is evidence that the cloud “revenue” spent on oracle is just financially engineered deals, throw-ins on license deals, audits, etc. Oracle has missed the market for infrastructure, and it’s way too late now to catch up.

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Post ID: @znc+19PQ21TA

What does this mean to worker bees?

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Post ID: @ehh+19PQ21TA

When cutting and pasting that text you seemed to have forgotten:

"Disclosure: at the time of this writing, Oracle and Google Cloud were among the many clients of Cloud Wars Media LLC and/or Evans Strategic Communications LLC."

Give a blog money and they will say nice things about you shocker!

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Post ID: @ruu+19PQ21TA

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