Oracle VP Robert Shrimp on Enterprise Search 11
garzpacho writes "BusinessWeek interviews Robert Shrimp on the enterprise search market. Shrimp talks about about the importance of corporate search, addresses what some claim is Oracle's lateness to the arena and takes a few shots at competitors: 'Our main competition is the filing cabinet...The manila file folder is the ultimate enemy.'"
If you don't like shrimp on enterprise search... (Score:2, Funny)
Welcome (Score:2, Funny)
Like Lifestreams? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Like Lifestreams? (Score:3, Insightful)
Oracle is probably the strongest player in the traditional old enterprise database market - just the style of databases that was always managed as filing cabinets. Others are strong in different "edge" application of databases - www, scheduling, fora. Great most of MySQL installs is used to serve webpages, manage phpbb, image galleries online etc. You'll hardly ever see hospital hold
Re:Like Lifestreams? (Score:2)
I work in a small company (about 200 employees) and we do not have a full-time DBA. We have IT people who are trained to support Oracle, but they do other things mo
Re:Like Lifestreams? (Score:2)
And since Oracle can't compete with Postgres, it competes with file cabinets
The man's name is Robert Shimp. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The man's name is Robert Shimp. (Score:2)
Very embarrassing. After all, we all know that Curly was the better stooge. Good thing his name wasn't Curly Joe... or Joe Besser.
Not surprising, really. (Score:3, Interesting)
And once that data is archived, a searching function to quickly (if not sooner) go through and accurately return the document that it thinks you're looking for is absolutely critical. I can't imagine a more problematic scene for an IT shop than to have the users come back and say, "Well, that's great. But how do I find what I want now?" (And I'm not talking about the "Which key is the Any key?" users.) I've seen the ability (or rather inability) to do an accurate search become a majorheadache for many imaging and data warehouse installs.
I hear... (Score:1)