January 18, 2006 7:45 PM PST
Oracle details postmerger plans
- Related Stories
-
Oracle-PeopleSoft merger hits one-year mark
January 11, 2006 -
SAP merges its Americas units
January 10, 2006 -
PeopleSoft apps certified for Oracle middleware
December 13, 2005 -
Microsoft CRM update aims at firms big and small
December 6, 2005 -
Oracle goes for girth
October 24, 2005
Speaking at San Francisco City Hall, Oracle's top brass focused on the company's efforts to overhaul its business applications software, incorporating the best technology from more than a dozen companies it acquired during the past year or so. That initiative, called
Video:
Clearing up some myths
Oracle President Charles Phillips talks about what his company is up to.
Oracle President Charles Phillips said the company is already half done with its work on Fusion and will no longer refer to the effort as a "project." Oracle executives also said the company is on track to deliver its first Fusion applications release in 2008, as previously promised.
"Oracle is halfway to Fusion," Phillips said. "A year later, we're 50 percent done and that's the tough half. (We're) pretty proud of that."
Notably missing from the evening's event was Oracle Chief Executive Officer Larry Ellison, who was scheduled to speak. The audience was told he had come down with the flu and, at the last minute, canceled his appearance.
Among the tasks Oracle checked off in 2005 were defining the Fusion architecture, certifying numerous products on Fusion middleware, defining new product requirements, enhancing support and building upgrade tools, executives said. It also delivered white papers and blueprints on these topics.
In 2006, the company plans to release new versions of three major sets of applications: Oracle E-business Suite 12, PeopleSoft 9 and JD Edwards 8.12. Each will incorporate Fusion components, including application integration tools, business reporting programs and workflow.
Phillips sought to downplay the difficulty of the Fusion redesign, calling the concern that Oracle is attempting to do something unprecedented and risky a "myth." "This is just a new product; we do it all the time," he said. "We've done this before."
Executives said another myth it would like to dispel is that the redesign will force customers to upgrade to Fusion products. On the contrary, upgrades are optional because Oracle offers lifetime support for its current generation of products, they said. But the company urged customers to upgrade to new interim releases it introduces this year and "retire" custom-built applications that may not work with Fusion technology if they want to have the latest technology.
"There's a path to Fusion applications," said John Wookey, Oracle's senior vice president in charge of applications. "But you need to take that step."
Since acquiring PeopleSoft, Oracle has scooped up a bunch of smaller software companies, including retail software specialists Retek and Profit Logic, in
The
Meanwhile SAP, its chief rival on the applications front,
See more CNET content tagged:
Oracle Corp.,
myth,
PeopleSoft Inc.,
business application,
IBM Corp.





Sure they are doing well, but no better than the rest of the industry when expressed in constant currancy.
Last quarter they reported "impressive" growth based on a re-evaluation of the currency exchange rate.
Wake up America!