Talk to certain folks and you'd believe Oracle is doomed, doomed. Its proprietary database solutions are a prime target for being displaced by the likes of open source contenders MariaDB and PostgreSQL. It's only a matter of time.
Well, sure, but the real question is: How much time? And what will it take to make leaving Big Red behind a real proposition for an enterprise that's got Java middleware, Sun servers, and Unbreakable Linux running all of the above?
The folks behind PostgreSQL and MariaDB do have a lot to crow about. PostgreSQL is widely respected as an enterprise-class database, even if it doesn't get the kind of press MySQL routinely did. One of the biggest PostgreSQL providers, EnterpriseDB, recently landed a plum spot in the "Challenger Quadrant" for Gartner's Magic Quadrant for Operational Database Management Systems report. I'm just as skeptical as anyone else about the value of the Magic Quadrant reports, but there's little doubt that being featured there gets you the right kind of attention if you're a growing company or dark horse.
MariaDB, the MySQL fork, has also been flush with successes -- both strategic and financial. The company has made enough of a dent in the consciousness of the digerati that many longtime MySQL users are switching to MariaDB: Wikipedia and Google, just to name two. Given Oracle's shabby track record with MySQL and unfriendly pricing, it's hardly surprising.
MariaDB's also inspired others to take MySQL and beat Oracle at its own game. To wit: Percona, who has its own edition of MySQL 5.6 that sports variants on features found in Oracle's enterprise editions of that product. And the MariaDB folks have also benefited from a $20 million infusion of cash courtesy of SkySQL.
This is all great news, but let's not confuse any of this with a direct assault on Oracle's customer base or business plan. These things by themselves don't constitute displacement of Oracle, which has a staggering $37 billion revenue base as of 2013 and has even modestly goosed its profit margins across the past five years. Expecting Big Red to dry up and blow away any time soon is foolish.
Because so much of the press about Oracle revolves around its products and technologies, it's easy to forget that Oracle is primarily a services company -- one that just happens to be in the market of selling its proprietary products to Fortune 100 customers. Folks like PostgreSQL and MariaDB may not be able to tear those customers away from Oracle all at once -- not just because Oracle makes it difficult to leave, but because these customers are invested in Oracle as an application provider, not just a database provider.
That migration can happen in time, but it'll take a lot more than infusions of cash and a roster of success stories from companies that would never have used Oracle in the first place. If PostgreSQL and MariaDB are serious about moving people off Oracle's platforms, plural, they're going to need to provide all the things Oracle does: databases, apps, and support structure. The first and third, they already do; there's plenty of outfits from which to buy enterprise-level support for both competitors' products or which supply migration tools.
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