Tag: Database

From the 2013 Exadata Virtual Conference Lawrence To, Oracle Corporation Exadata MAA for Maximum Availability and Stability Essential Exadata Operational Practices This file has an audio issue at 50:45 that is being corrected

From the 2013 Exadata Virtual Conference Mathew Steinberg, Oracle Corporation Exadata Database Machine Review Exadata Updates New Offering for Exadata Database Machine:Oracle Infrastructure as a Service on Premise

From the 2013 Exadata Virtual Conference Ananth Ram, Accenture & Jigar Shah, Independent Consultant Business case for EBS on Exadata Proof-of-value of EBS on Exadata Sizing Exadata for EBS Getting 10X performance Migration of EBS in Exadata EBS cloning in Exadata EBS backup and recovery in Exadata EBS real-time replication in Exadata

From the 2013 Exadata Virtual Conference Doug Utzig, Oracle Corporation Agenda: Software Architecture Overview Planning Updating Exadata Software Updating Grid Infrastructure and Database Software Security Updates Best Practices

From the 2013 Exadata Virtual Conference Chris Bradham, Vizuri Agenda: Technology Refresh Legacy Environment / Options Operational / Migration Considerations Results of Migration Lessons Learned References Q & A

Oracle Database In-Memory is the industry-leading in-memory database technology, seamlessly accelerating analytics as well as improving mixed workload enterprise OLTP applications on databases of any size. Join Oracle Product Management to learn how to get started with Database In-Memory, how to identify which objects to populate in memory, how to identify which indexes to drop,…

Legacy hardware is costing companies hours of downtime and as a result over $1.1 million in lost revenue a year. But replacing this aging hardware is daunting. Learn the risks associated with legacy hardware, the solutions to keep integral applications without the headaches of aging hardware, and how you can take back control with virtualization.…

When you transition from on-site development to development in the cloud, your system undergoes some significant shifts. Hardware resources are no longer static. Expense model is flexible (up to even “pay-per-use”) Previously, as long as your current servers were surviving the workload, it did not matter whether they were 50% or 70% utilized. Now, this…