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Archive for the ‘Oracle’ Category

Reducing Fusion Confusion (Part 5): Unlimited and Lifetime Support for Applications

Friday, July 11th, 2008

As we mentioned in an earlier blog entry, Oracle’s Applications Unlimited strategy complements the Fusion Applications. This means that you can conceivably remain on your current ERP platform without having to upgrade to Fusion Applications. Oracle categorizes three stages of lifetime support for Applications Unlimited. We will summarize the features and benefits of each, as described by Oracle on their site (http://www.oracle.com/support/lifetime-support-policy.html), and then explain why we do not recommend allowing your organization to remain at the third level of support.

1) Premier Support – provides you with maintenance and support of your Oracle Database, Oracle Fusion Middleware, and Oracle Applications for five years from their general availability date.

2) Extended Support – allows you stay competitive, with the freedom to upgrade on your own timetable. It provides you with an extra three years of support for specific Oracle releases for an additional fee. You benefit from the same quality of service you receive with Premier Support, with the security of knowing you can expand your systems when the time is right.

3) Sustaining Support – puts you in control of your upgrade strategy. With Sustaining Support, you will receive technical support for as long as you operate your systems – which includes access to Oracle’s online support tools, knowledgebases, pre-existing fixes for your solution, and assistance from technical experts.

Our recommendation is not to remain in the Sustaining Support mode, because no new bugs will be accepted at this level. This negates your ability to be in control of your upgrade strategy based on business requirements, because, should a new issue arise, the standard advice will be to upgrade.

In our next entry, we will provide practical recommendations about what you should do about all of this now.

Reducing Fusion Confusion (Part 4): How Oracle is Approaching Development of the Fusion Application Suite

Tuesday, July 1st, 2008

To facilitate the best of breed approach to Fusion Applications, Oracle consolidates the foundation components for each of the products in its portfolio (E-Business Suite, PeopleSoft, JD Edwards and Siebel) in the suite’s technology stack.

Oracle has been doing this in a 2-step process. At one level, it is pulling more products under the Fusion Middleware umbrella. Fusion Middleware has expanded from a Web server to a rich suite of products including Application Server, Identity management, Security, Business Intelligence and Application Integration Architecture.

At the next level, Oracle has been upgrading the technology stack of the application products in the portfolio so that as many products from the Fusion Middleware suite can be utilized as possible.

For example, XML Publisher, the reporting framework from the Fusion Middleware Suite of products, has been certified to work with PeopleSoft 8.48 and is seamlessly integrated with version 9.0. This means when customers use PeopleSoft version 9.0, they are ready for Fusion Applications.

The same approach is used for several of the products in Fusion Middleware suite, such as Single Sign-on solutions, and Oracle Business Intelligence Enterprise Edition (Formerly Siebel Analytics), which has been certified to work with E-Business suite.

The Fusion Applications will work on the same set of Fusion Middleware components. So you can protect your investment and reduce some upgrade-related headaches in the future by ensuring that your environment is running at least at the minimum level required to take advantage of the direct upgrade path to Fusion Applications.

In our next entry, we will discuss the available support options for Oracle Fusion.

Reducing Fusion Confusion (Part 3): The Fusion Applications

Wednesday, June 25th, 2008

Fusion Applications is still in the works and there is no date announced for availability. Oracle’s vision for Fusion Applications is to create an application suite that unifies best-of-business capabilities from all Oracle Applications in a complete suite. This means, for example, it could be an amalgamation of strong HR functionality from PeopleSoft paired with core Financials from E-Business Suite.

It is less clear how it will play out in practice. It could be a totally new suite of applications, apart from E-Business Suite, PeopleSoft, JD Edwards, and Siebel. Another scenario is that the solution could enable you to pick and choose the modules you want to install and those modules may come from multiple, pre-existing Oracle product families. For example, in a single instance, you could select PeopleSoft HR and E-Business Suite financials with the underlying technology stack at the database and Application Server level supporting such a configuration.

Complementing the Fusion Applications is Oracle’s Applications Unlimited strategy. We’ll cover that in our next entry.

Reducing Fusion Confusion (Part 2): The Fusion Middleware

Friday, June 20th, 2008

Oracle Fusion Middleware is available now. It is a loose collection of middleware infrastructure tools and components centering around Identity Management, Business Intelligence, Application Integration, Web Server, Collaboration Suite, etc. When it comes to licensing, you may have to license each one independently. A complete listing of middleware products can be found here: http://www.oracle.com/products/middleware/index.html.

If you are going to use any of these products, you should verify the certification matrix to ensure the product combination is certified. For example, Oracle 10g Application Server is not certified with 11.5.10.2 E-Business Suite. If you want to take advantage of all that 10g AS has to offer in your E-Business Suite environment, you need to upgrade your E-Business Suite environment to R12.

Our next entry will be about Fusion Applications.

Reducing Fusion Confusion (Part 1): The Branding Issue

Monday, June 16th, 2008

With its continuous spree of acquisitions and increasingly complex array of solutions, the Oracle branding strategy is not getting any easier to follow.

It’s a throwback to the time when Oracle struggled with branding the middleware platform. First it was called Web Application Server (WAS), then Internet Application Server (iAS). Finally, a longer term strategy was put into place with 9iAS and 10gAS.

Coming back to the source of the confusion with Fusion, Oracle, in all its wisdom, has chosen the same name for its Applications and Middleware suites of products. We will talk about each of them in upcoming blog entries, starting with Fusion Middleware.