Oracle Corporation

Oracle Corporation
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Type Public (NASDAQ: ORCL)
Founded California (?) (1977)
Location Redwood Shores, California
Key people Lawrence (Larry) J. Ellison, CEO
Jeff Henley, Chairman
Safra Catz, President/CFO
Chuck Phillips, President
Industry Software & Programming
Products Oracle Database
Oracle eBusiness Suite
Oracle Application Server
Oracle JDeveloper
Oracle ADF
Oracle Collaboration Suite
Oracle Enterprise Manager
Revenue Missing image
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$10.156 billion USD (2004)
Website www.oracle.com

Oracle Corporation (NASDAQ: ORCL), one of the major companies developing database management systems, tools for database development, and enterprise resource planning software, dates from 1977 and has offices in more than 145 countries around the world. As of 2005, it employs over 50,000 worldwide.

Lawrence J. Ellison (Larry Ellison) has served as Oracle's CEO for several years. Ellison served as the chairman of the board until his replacement by Jeff Henley in 2004. Ellison retains his role as CEO. Forbes magazine once adjudged Ellison the richest man in the world.

Ellison was inspired by the paper written by Edgar F. Codd on relational database systems named A Relational Model of Data for Large Shared Data Banks. He had heard about the IBM System R database, also based on Codd's theories, and wanted Oracle to be compatible with it, but IBM stopped this by keeping the error codes for their DBMS secret. He founded Oracle in 1977 under the name Software Development Laboratories. In 1979 SDL changed its name to Relational Software, Inc. (RSI). In 1983, RSI was renamed Oracle Corporation to more closely align itself with its flagship product Oracle database with Howard Johns as senior programmer.

Contents

Products

As of 2004 Oracle Corporation shipped release 10g (g: grid) as the latest version of the Oracle database. Oracle Application Server 10g (AS 10g) using J2EE comprises the server part of that version of the database, making it possible to deploy web technology applications. The application server is the first middle-tier software designed for grid computing. The strong interrelationship between Oracle 10g and Java has enabled the company to allow developers to set up stored procedures written in the Java language, as well as those written in the traditional Oracle database programming language, PL/SQL.

Oracle Corporation's tools for developing applications include Oracle Designer, Oracle Developer - that consists of Oracle (Web)Forms, Oracle Discoverer and Oracle Reports, Oracle JDeveloper, and several more. Many external and third-party tools make the Oracle database administrator's tasks easier.

Besides databases, Oracle also sells a suite of business applications. The Oracle e-Business Suite includes software to perform financial, manufacturing and HR (Human Resource Management Systems) related functions. User access to these facilities is provided through a browser interface over the internet or corporate intranet. Oracle markets many of its products using the slogan "can't break it, can't break in". This signifies the increasing demands on information safety. Oracle Corporation also stresses the reliability of networked databases and network access to databases as major selling points.

History

Headquarters

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Oracle HQ, showed in Database-Symbol-Style Shape

Oracle Corporation has its world headquarters on the San Francisco Peninsula in the Redwood Shores area of Redwood City, adjacent to Belmont, near San Carlos Airport (SQL).

Oracle HQ stands on the former site of Marine World, which moved from Redwood Shores to Vallejo in 1986. Oracle Corporation originally leased two buildings from the site, moving its finance and administration departments from the corporation's former headquarters in Menlo Park. Eventually, Oracle purchased the complex and constructed a further four main buildings.

The Oracle Parkway buildings were prominently featured as the futuristic headquarters of fictional company "NorthAm Robotics" in the Robin Williams film Bicentennial Man (1999). [1]

Trivia

In June 2005, Oracle raised eyebrows when their Development License required customers to certify a number of facts that effectively established that the user is not a terrorist. While it was considered normal for a company to refuse export to Iran, Sudan, Libya, North Korea or Syria (current US law forbids export to these countries due to trade sanctions), it seemed unusual that Oracle would not export to Cuba, a member of the WTO, that they would demand assurances that customers were not listed terrorists or known drug traffickers, and that they would also expressly refuse permission for their software to be used in the development of biological, chemical and nuclear weapons of mass destruction

Related corporations

Other corporations which produce products relating to Oracle databases include:

External links

See also: Oracle Corporation, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1986