JoMiran

joined 1 year ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 hours ago

Amen. Oracle has made us buckets of cash but dear lord are they awful. IT will be better once they are gone.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 2 hours ago (5 children)

Late thirties until you qualify for AARP (50), but honestly, we live an actively lifestyle for so long now that it really holds no significance anymore.

[–] [email protected] 20 points 3 hours ago (11 children)

Harris is a Boomer by a little over two months. Missed Gen-X by a hair. I hate to break it to the millennials but Harris isn't middle aged...you are.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 hours ago

Lift and shift may be out of the question tho.

That and cost are the real issue. This is not their app, so they cannot rearchitect it. To make it fit to best use cloud resources, the thing would need to be rebuilt from scratch, and the savings are just not there to do so.

We need to move 8 gigabytes per second, sustained, which Azure can do at their highest tier. The problem is that, as I said, this is the smallest of our medium clients, and at the tier that can sustain that, the cost per terabyte per month is well beyond the client's budget. We told them to go with Exadata but the initial sticker shock and the execs lack of faith on their IT team made them run. Now they are committed to Azure. Just last week we had that call where we told Azure our requirements and they just came back with the price a few days ago. Suddenly, dropping seven figures for the hardware doesn't seem too expensive.

Whatever. We get paid either way.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 4 hours ago (2 children)

I 100% agree, unfortunately the reality is that it is just not possible...yet. We have projects where the C suite has demanded a cloud transition and a move from Oracle and every single one has been a disaster. The highest tier iops Azure offers is not enough to cover our smallest medium customer. Believe me, I have been working with Oracle since v7. You will be hard pressed to find someone that dislikes Oracle more than me and I pray for the day they go away or have a massive shift like MS has. But, as it relates to SUSE's growth as a RHEL replacement, Oracle is and will likely continue to be a deterrent. I hope I am wrong because even though I started my Linux journey with Red Hat Halloween, they too have lost me.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 5 hours ago* (last edited 3 hours ago)

Postgres can't handle what I am talking about. The more likely replacement for Oracle on Linux for this types of projects is Exadata.

EDIT: Your downvote doesn't change facts. This is not corporate shilling. I freaking hate Oracle, but facts are facts.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 5 hours ago (4 children)

I mean, you can disagree if you want to but I am not quoting opinion, these are facts on the ground from firms running the largest applications. I am by no means saying that Oracle is in a growth state, quite the contrary. Anybody that has $ORCL should be dumping that stock. The issue is that the large scale applications (not environments) are stuck with Oracle as the backend. The NoSQL promise and FOSS transition didn't work out for them. Now the issue as it relates to the original post is, IF you are stuck with Oracle because of one or two critical apps, and you can't afford Exadata, then you might gravitate to the RHEL variants for those systems. You could go SUSE for the rest, but most big organizations tend to prefer a single stop shop.

Oddly enough, and this is now purely personal opinion, of Oracle adjusted their Exadata pricing, I think they could solidify their dominance in the space long term AND free IT organizations to chose SUSE without fear.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 6 hours ago

Oh man. That's amazing.

[–] [email protected] 8 points 7 hours ago

100%. She's lost a ton of weight and is as skinny today as when we met 30 years ago. She says she just doesn't really enjoy food any more and she can eat super spicy now. She's turned into one of those suited guys from Fringe where they put on a ton of hit sauce on everything because they couldn't taste anything otherwise.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 8 hours ago (2 children)

Both. My wife is the super genius but sensitive to light, sound and smell. She wear special glasses, age has taken the edge off her sensitive hearing, and COVID-19 practically deleted her sense of smell. She's never been happier. Her new favorite thing to do is walk around theme parks because the sounds and smells no longer bother her.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 8 hours ago (10 children)

I cannot speak for smaller firms because we only deal with enterprise level projects. What we have seen and continue to see is that if the demands of the project are light enough to run on the cloud, then the company will do that (Azure is kicking everyone's ass in sales BTW). Anyone else, which is the majority or pur clients (and they don't like hearing it) are stuck with Oracle. Sure, you can off-load a lot of functionality to other things, but for RDBMS you are stuck with the big red ⭕.

 

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Strands #145
“Go for the gold”
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Wordle 1,132 2024.07.25 (www.nytimes.com)
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“All that jazz”
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Strands #143
“Screen time”
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Fat fingered the hint button at the last minute.

 

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Strands #142
“You're the best!”
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Wordle 1,129 2024.07.22 (www.nytimes.com)
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No yellow

 

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“Make waves”
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Probably the hardest for me yet.

 

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Strands #140
“S-words? (a cutting-edge theme!)”
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