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June 2008 Archives

June 2, 2008

We Wish: Jim Gray's Accomplishments, Reconsidered

The Jim Gray Tribute on the UC Berkeley campus last weekend was instructive to me in several ways.

First of all, it made me realize how relatively small the "database science" community really is. Had you vaporized Zellerbach Hall at 10am last Saturday, you would have set data management back a hundred years. To me, it seemed everyone there knew each other from some past academic or business relationship.

Second, once cannot overemphasize the magnitude of Jim Gray's accomplishments. Before Jim Gray's work, database transactions were poorly understood, poorly engineered, inefficient, and expensive. (As Bruce Lindsay pointed out, in 1969, a single ATM transaction cost a bank $5. Today, it costs half a cent.)

Jim Gray (and others, but principally him) not only invented the transaction theories that serves as the "philosophical" underpinnings of OLTP (eg, ACID properties, sequential processing, concurrency, etc.) but also designed their implementation within relational database systems - as well as the benchmarks for measuring their performance. In that sense, Gray was equally influential as a theorist and engineer (and as I learned at the tribute, also supremely collaborative).

Consider that fact for a moment. Before Gray's work, crediting a bank account or booking a reservation was an inexact process. After Gray's work, it is now a reliable, efficient, precisely engineered one. (This accomplishment garnered him a Turing Award, the Nobel of computer science.) It would not be over-dramatic to say that Jim Gray made modern business systems - made e-business - possible.

So here we are today, debating the fate of Twitter, of the portable social graph, of business models for social networking. People, please. We are like ants scurrying under the feet of giants. Compared to the problems tackled by Gray - and others like him; he was not alone - these issues are trivial in the extreme. (But we'll continue to talk about them, because it's fun.)

Finally, the paradox of Gray's fate - his disappearance literally into thin air - is a cruel one. Gray himself, whose greatest accomplishments were about removing all ambiguity from transactions, is like a transaction lost in mid-flight. His family and friends are now left to cope with the challenge of "ambiguous loss", as one speaker put it, forever.

Update (June 3): Archived video of this event is now available here.

BEA Welcome and Oracle's Middleware Strategy Briefing, July 1 (Webcast only)

The official invite is out there:

"Join Oracle executives Charles Phillips, President, and Thomas Kurian, Senior Vice President, Oracle Server Technologies Development, for an informative briefing that will explore how the addition of BEA products to Oracle Fusion Middleware creates a best-in-class combination, advances a common vision, and reinforces Oracle's middleware strategy."

Register for this July 1 Webcast here.

Update (June 3): Are you a Dev2Dev or Arch2Arch member with a question about the transition process? See this new FAQ.

June 10, 2008

Oracle's Arch2Arch Newsletter

As I have mentioned previously, BEA did a good job reaching out to the "Architect" constituency, better than OTN does. For that reason, one of our main goals this summer is to fork-lift BEA's "Arch2Arch" community to OTN, and we have big plans in that area.

For one, shortly you will see new "Architecture Centers" and discussion forums on the OTN Website, focusing on areas such as SOA Governance and Enterprise 2.0. Existing centers covering SOA and Virtualization will also be beefed up considerably.

But even better, we have decided to maintain the Arch2Arch community's newsletter, Arch2Arch Advisor going forward in its new incarnation as "Oracle's Arch2Arch Newsletter", under the editor-ship of Bob Rhubart. You can subscribe to this newsletter right now (see "Electronic Subscriptions" section; first edition in August).

Who knows, you may even see "OTN Architect Day" workshops later this year. Stay tuned.

June 13, 2008

Come and Get It: Blogger Credential for Oracle OpenWorld

You may recall that last year, Oracle issued blogger credentials at Oracle OpenWorld for the first time.

Well, call it an annual event: blogger credentials will be issued this year as well, starting now! Register at this URL. (Note: this looks like a generic attendee form but it does go straight to the Blogger Care & Feeding Team. Replace "Company Name" with "Blog Name".)

Sorry, authors of wine & cheese blogs need not apply. We are indeed looking for people who can add to the conversation in a productive way, so you may be asked for details about your blog's focus.

Credentialed bloggers (sounds like an oxymoron, no?) will have access to all kinds of great stuff, the details of which the Blogger Care & Feeding Team is working on right now. AppsLab Jake and I are both personally involved in making this a rewarding experience, so no worries there!

More details about this program to come as I get them.

Update (9:29am) - perhaps I should also mention that this program is for non-employees only. Sorry, Oracle employee bloggers!

Update (6/15) - I've seen some grumbling in the 'sphere about the ostensible "opacity" of the approval process. Folks, it's just plain common sense: the blog has to be relevant. (See "wine & cheese" language above.) That's it.

June 19, 2008

Of Oracle ACEs, ODTUG, and Bling

The Oracle ACE presence at ODTUG Kaleidoscope could not have been more productive. I really appreciate the time (and in some cases long travel time) rendered by the 40+ Oracle ACEs in attendance.

The Oracle ACE bling that the ODTUG Board took it upon themselves to provide is priceless; it is simultaneously the silliest and greatest thing I have ever seen:


Model: Dan Morgan


Model: Dan Norris



You can't beat that with a stick, as they say.

June 20, 2008

Coffee Break

I'll be taking a break from blogging for the next several days, while we complete our loooong awaited migration to MTE1.52, running on top of Oracle Content DB. (An upgrade to MTE4 is planned for the very near future.)

So, please don't go anywhere; I'll be back shortly (at same URL).

About June 2008

This page contains all entries posted to OTN TechBlog in June 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

May 2008 is the previous archive.

July 2008 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

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