NoSQL are growing 50% YoY, have like 5% market share. They offer ACID, all enterprise security you expect, and cheap scaling. NewSQL are popping up left and right. Many Fortune companies have already canceled their Oracle contracts and are in the middle of moving away before support expires, or at least paying for 3rd party support. Moving all oracle install base. No saying it’s easy, but if you piss the C suite enough, they will bite the bullet.
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.
Azure has had nvme drives with hundreds of thousands of iops for a couple of years. That plus sharding should take care of any problems. I have personally taken care of a project with 2M tps and it wasn’t even the biggest in my region, at the small-ish company I work for. Yes, re-architecting that is a pain but doable.
NoSQL are growing 50% YoY, have like 5% market share. They offer ACID, all enterprise security you expect, and cheap scaling. NewSQL are popping up left and right. Many Fortune companies have already canceled their Oracle contracts and are in the middle of moving away before support expires, or at least paying for 3rd party support. Moving all oracle install base. No saying it’s easy, but if you piss the C suite enough, they will bite the bullet.
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.
Azure has had nvme drives with hundreds of thousands of iops for a couple of years. That plus sharding should take care of any problems. I have personally taken care of a project with 2M tps and it wasn’t even the biggest in my region, at the small-ish company I work for. Yes, re-architecting that is a pain but doable.
Lift and shift may be out of the question tho.