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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.'"
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Oracle VP Robert Shrimp on Enterprise Search

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    ..try the Paul Allen chow mein
  • Welcome (Score:2, Funny)

    by daddyrief ( 910385 )
    I, for one, welcome our new crustacean overlord.
  • Like Lifestreams? (Score:2, Interesting)

    It's interesting that Shimp says Oracle's main competition is the file cabinet. I wonder if he's just being figurative, or if he sees Oracle as steering us away from the desktop metaphor and its information management problems, and moving toward something instantly contextual like David Gelernter's Lifestreams [yale.edu] where information is queried as a contextual, time-ordered stream using filters. Hopefully, it'll be more than just simply indexing labels and keywords.
    • by Vo0k ( 760020 )
      He just says there's a huge piece of market for enterprise databases that is untapped because the databases are in paper form.
      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
      • I agree with everything you said about MySQL not competing with Oracle, but I think Postgres is coming near. Postgres is to Oracle what Clayton Christensen called a "disruptive innovation". Today, I would recommend Postgres instead of Oracle to any corporation whose database isn't big enough to justify having a team of DBAs fully dedicated to it.

        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

        • Today, I would recommend Postgres instead of Oracle to any corporation whose database isn't big enough to justify having a team of DBAs fully dedicated to it.
          And since Oracle can't compete with Postgres, it competes with file cabinets :) If the institution was still using paper files instead of computers, there's a good chance they will be clueless enough to move to Oracle instead of Postgres :)
  • by Futurepower(R) ( 558542 ) on Tuesday May 16, 2006 @07:35AM (#15341175) Homepage
    Embarrassing. The man's name is Robert Shimp, not Shrimp, as it says in the Slashdot story.
  • by WidescreenFreak ( 830043 ) on Tuesday May 16, 2006 @08:29AM (#15341341) Homepage Journal
    This isn't that much of a surprise that he considers the manilla envelope/folder to be the enemy. One of Oracle's strengths has always been as a data warehouse. From their perspective, any data that's stored in on envelopre or folder is something that can be archived digitally. Of course, archiving digitally, and thus becoming the "paperless" office that many tout but never implement, means revenue dollars for Oracle. After all, something has to archive all of that data. The more people who store their data in folders and envelopes, the less likely Oracle is to sell to that company as a data warehouse solution. So, naturally a folder or envelope is a threat to their business model.

    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.
  • that the Jefferies Tubes are a good place to make a clandestine Enterprise search.

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