July 27, 2008

Are you here for the wildebeest?

wildebeest%20herds.JPG

What does this blog have in common with wildebeest?

It's the migration.

The migration of blog posts in the BEA/Oracle blogosphere is one of the world's most spectacular digital events. The entire herd of blog posts need to cross the vast digital plain between BEA and Oracle. Thousands of individual blog posts from mature adult posts that could be as much as three or four years old to the younger juvenile posts that are just a couple of months old are making their way to the richer pastures of Oracle.

The once fertile blog pastures of BEA and now barren and inhospitable. The new blog lands of Oracle are vibrant and healthy. New blog life flourishes here with new blog posts and bloggers springing up on a daily basis.

My long and arduous process of migration completed today with each and every precious blog post making it safely to the new lands.

-sean

July 17, 2008

Killer App?

As much as I try and stop myself I just can't help thinking about the iPhone 3G. I will try some sort of twelve step program from today to cure me of my addiction. I don't even have one of the blasted things yet - I'm waiting for the 32Gb version by the way, with video.

Who buys a version one product anyway? Oh what's that you say? One million people in the first weekend it was on sale. Ah, I see.

Anyway, here are some further thoughts on Mark Pesce's view of radio as the killer application for 3G. These thoughts are courtesy of Neil Shoebridge and the July 14 edition of the Australian Financial Review - the full article is available here for subscribers only. I've quoted the best bits below;

"Glenn Wheatley is back in business, bankrolled by an eclectic collection of investors including former Allco Finance Group chairman David Coe, Sydney radio announcer Alan Jones, fashion designer Collette Dinnigan and eBay Australia vice-president Simon Smith.

The investors have sunk $4 million intoa?| Stripe which will launch 25 radio stations on the Optus 3G network on July 29. The company is also in talks with Telstra about carrying its stations.

Stripe is a subscription based service with stations devoted to music genres such as heavy metal, hip hop, country and classic rock. Some of the stations use content licensed from the ABC, the BBC and British radio company Kerrang!

Optus will charge $8 a month for subscriptions to the service, splitting the revenue with Stripea?| which is run by Iain Bartram, a former Chief financial Officer of listed technology company ConnXion. Stripea??s directors include investment bankers, Gary Jones and Nicholas Goh, both of whom have worked with Mr. Coe.

Mr Bartram predicted stripe would turn over about $4 million in its first year. He said it would break even if about 1 per cent of Australians, or 210,000 people, subscribed and was aiming to sign about 1 million subscribers within five years.

Mr Coe and Mr Jones own 65% of Stripe which employs 20 people. Mr Goh and Mr Bartram own 8 per cent and 4 per cent respectively, while TalentWorks a?? the management company owned by Wheatley and his wife Gaynor a?? owns 12 per cent.

Richard East, the Australian theatre producer who owns part of the musical a??Mamma Miaa?? owns 2 per cent. Other shareholders include veteran radio industry executive Brad March, Nine Network presenter Richard Wilkins, comedian Billy Birmingham and singer Glenn Shorrock.

The list of shareholders also includes brothers Andrew and Colin Cookes who once owned the retailer Venture Stores, David Whittle from ad agency M&C Saatchia??s Mark digital marketing division (Mark devised the Stripe name and logo), investment banker Phillippe Sung and telecommunications industry executive Christopher Eyles.

Over the past year a?| Stripe has signed licensing deals with music companies Sony BMG, Warner Music, EMI, Universal and Shock Records, plus smaller specialist firms such as Ministry of Sound and Central Station.

The 25 Stripe stationsa?| have been put together by the companya??s program director Jarrod Graetz, and Pollack Media, a Los Angeles-based radio consulting firm Wheatley worked with in the 1970s when he was one of the people who launched Australiaa??s first FM radio station a?? EON a?? in Melbourne (EON later became Triple M).

Wheatley said Stripe would be producing 40 stations by the end of 2008 and about 100 by late 2009. a??The key to Stripes success or failure is the quality of the contenta?? he said.

Stripe is negotiating deals to include sport and news content in its stations. None of its stations will carry advertising. a??At some point we might include some ads, but only if they are directly related to the content of the station,a?? Mr Bartram said. a??Commercial radio listeners complain about the ads all the time. The Stripe stations will never have huge blocks of ads.a??

I think they may have a point.

-sean

July 16, 2008

"How big a deal is IT?"

A new front has opened up in the battle of using IT for business competitiveness. The battle that has since Nicholas Carr, wrote "Does IT Matter?" in 2004.

Read this article to see where the battle lines are drawn today.

I'm a big fan of the work of Andrew McAfee, and hugely enjoyed his talk at one of the last BEA conferences held before the Oracle acquisition.

I'm of the view that IT does matter, but not in and of itself. IT only matters in how it is used. It matters in how it can provide, support and maintain competitive advantage. It's just one tool that a business can use to improve, but the change in pace of technology and the speed of adoption of today's latest advances mark it out as an important one.

In Andrews words, "Are the players of the game of business interested in finding out how the rules theya??re accustomed to have changed, and how to put themselves on the high side of the large spread thata??s resulted?"

-sean

July 13, 2008

iPhone Antidote. Coming Soon.

Apple iPhone 3G.

Yes it looks great.

Yes it's a dream to use.

Yes I would like one.

Yes it has first mover advantage and a host of apps available from the AppStore for it. From the sublime "the most amazing application I have ever seen", to the ridiculous "The Most Unproductive 'Productivity' iPhone App". From the fun "...Super Monkey Ball rolls with the accelerometer." to the serious "Oracle Business Applications for iPhone Available on Apple App Store".

But... an antidote is coming soon. What's that noise you can hear in the background? It's the BlackBerry Thunder - screenshots here, with different on-screen keyboards depending on if you're holding the phone in portrait or landscape mode. Noice eh?.

-sean

July 9, 2008

First!

First post on the new home of Oracle blogs and boy, a lot has been happening in the last couple of weeks.

Oracle Australia/New Zealand Sales Kick-Off - a look back over the last 12 months and a look ahead to the next 12 months across the three lines of business; Database, Fusion Middleware and Applications.

A few days of planning what Fusion Middleware Sales Consulting should look like in Australia and New Zealand. Who makes up the leadership group, how we mix the skills and abilities of this new merged team.

We publicly launched the Fusion Middleware Roadmap. It was a 2am gig for an Australian audience, so we' made sure it was recorded. You can find the replay here.

I attended the Politics and Technology Forum in Canberra, hosted by Microsoft and featuring some leading lights in those two fields in a couple of panel discussions - Matt Bai columnist and "non-blogger" (his words) from the New York Times, Mark Textor from Crosby Textor, Annabel Crabb of The Sydney Morning Herald, Peter Black from QUT (get that blog going again Peter). Sitting members Joe Hockey, Kate Lundy and Andrew Bartlett who to his enormous credit joined us on his last day as a Senator - and has a proper blog, not just a member for so-and-so website for press releases. This group was topped with everyone's favourite election analyst, Anthony Green from the ABC.

The event was recorded - well, live streamed actually - by Nick Hodge and twittered live byStilgherrian - you can find the tweet stream here powered by the quite wonderful summize.com.

I gave two presentations on Next Generation Grid Enabled SOA at the Gartner Application Development Integration and Web Services (ADIWS) conference in Sydney - taking some of Dave Chappell's excellent work and spinning it for an Australian audience. Slides are available here on slideshare, and I'll be posting more of my presentation work on slideshare over the next few weeks and months.

And I migrated by blog to here. So, forward motion is everything. As Walt said, "keep moving forward". Check back soon for an update or take a moment to grab my rss feed and plug it in to your aggregator of choice.

-sean

June 5, 2008

More on The Phoney War

Oracle employee Day Five.

My first week as an Oracle employee draws to a close with more exposure to Oracle people as we plan a product roadmap session for the Sales Managers and Sales Consultants. We got some Product Management people in, along with a couple of us from the Sales Consulting side of things and have planned a full day of product roadmap training next week before going straight into the full Oracle Sales Kick-Off for Australia/New Zealand.

It is a positive, high-energy, full of momentum time for us here at the moment. I'm really looking forward to the next few months as we get our teams integrated and start to work around a consistent, coherent, class-leading set of products.

I can't wait.

-Sean

June 4, 2008

The Phoney War Is Over

Oracle employee Day Four.

OK, so it wasn't May 10, but the Phoney War ended today. There were no invasions. No new governments formed. But the next phase in this great plan started. I met some Oracle people.

They walked on two legs, ate normal food (not live rodents), and didn't seem to have that horrible scaly skin and two heads that I had been warned to expect (or if they did the second head was well hidden).

It was great for me to finally meet some Oracle folk. We were able to talk about respective teams and their skills, the likely product mix and product roadmap for the future... and we finished the day with a beer or two. Which was nice.

-Sean

June 3, 2008

Biting the bullet

Oracle employee Day three

I knew that I had to do this at some point and I had been putting it off all week. So I did it today. It was wet. I had time put aside. A few of my colleagues had also got theirs done my now so I knew there would be people around for help if I got stuck.

What am I talking about? Getting myself on the Oracle network. Yay!

It was one of those classic IT installs. You know those times when you need to do step 1, but before you start step 1 you have to do a, b and c. And you can't do c until you have the password from step 2, but you can't do step 2 until you've completed step 1. Arrgghhh.

Or as a colleague of mine said it's like the old joke about the bomb disposal manual over two pages, "First cut the blue wire", turn the page, "before cutting the blue wire you should ensure...".

It was painful. Slow. Draining. Mind-numbing. But necessary right? And don't get me wrong, good on our IT folk for having a terrific set of step-by-step instructions for us to follow, I just wish there weren't so many steps and so many ID's and so many installs.

I'm off to Melbourne tomorrow to meet some more Oracle folk and to talk about product roadmaps. I'll post more info here as soon as I can.

-Sean

June 2, 2008

Picking up the Pace

Oracle employee Day Two.

Things are starting to happen. We had a bunch of folks from both sides have a sit down in Redwood Shores last week to really start to figure out product strategy and product roadmap for the future. Where and how does the acquired BEA technology fit with the Oracle technology? All of a sudden we have two application servers and two service buses and two (or maybe more) portals. What are we going to do with all these tools and what is our toolbox going to look like?

Well, we're working that out some more internally and have some 100 day deadlines that we're aiming for. Externally, save this date, July 1, for more information. Charles Phillips and Thomas Kurian will host 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 here

There were no more jelly beans today, but we did have the special gift of an Asia Pacific wide conference call to introduce BEA to Oracle ;-)

-Sean

May 31, 2008

We're Back

Oracle employee Day One.

I spent the first part of my day cleaning up the BEA office after the wake we had here on Friday to solemnly mourn the passing of our good friend BEA. A bunch of us gathered to drink champagne, eat food and tell stories about our time at BEA - in a suitably decorated office with tombstones and coffins. And we didn't make too much of a mess, the clean-up was fairly easy. (Though some 'Think Liquid' merchandise didn't survive the day. "The future is liquid" Erm, not so much).

Then it was time for presents! Oracle HR were here in the BEA office in Sydney today, dishing out jelly beans and Oracle logo'd folders. I've also got a heap of work to do to install the Oracle VPN and network access and internet access and get my passwords aligned and all that stuff you have to do when you start a new job.

I have an Employee Orientation Day out at North Ryde on Friday 13th. And I do my first full day out there on Monday June 16th, and you know what? I'm really looking forward to it. I think the combination of Oracle and BEA will provide the scale that is needed to really offer an alternative to IBM and SAP and I'm up for the challenge.

Now for the interesting parts... product roadmaps and organisation structure.

-Sean

About

sboiling%20sml.JPG

Sean Boiling joined Oracle on June 1 2008 as part of the $8.5B acquisition of BEA. He lives and works in Sydney, Australia and has 20 years experience in IT.

He has worked in middleware, message queueing, client/server, componentware, SOA, COM/DCOM, Java, J2EE, Integration Servers, Application Servers, you name it. In fact, he's worked with most of the styles of IT plumbing that have been popular in the last 15 years.

He's currently Sales Consulting Manager for Oracle Fusion Middleware working with Oracle offerings in SOA, Enterprise 2.0, Identity Management and Application Infrastructure & Transaction Processing.

Categories

Powered by
Movable Type and Oracle