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Oracle offers support to Itanium

Stephen Shankland CNET News.com

Published: 03 Mar 2006 10:00 GMT

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Oracle will expand its support for HP's Itanium-based Unix servers, bringing a version of its E-Business Suite to market by the end of the year, the software firm said on Thursday.

Oracle's core database software has been available for years with HP's Integrity line of Itanium servers, but the E-Business Suite for finances and other corporate operations has been missing. But HP and Intel, which jointly designed the Itanium chip, have been working to expand the number of software partners in an attempt to fix a major problem that has hampered the chip since its debut.

To emphasise the significance of the expanded partnership, HP and Intel sent their top executives to an Itanium-focused meeting on Thursday with mutual customers at HP headquarters in Palo Alto, California. Mark Hurd and Paul Otellini, the chief executives of HP and Intel respectively, announced the partnership at the meeting, while Oracle's chief executive, Larry Ellison, made a video appearance.

"We're trying to put more energy into our relationship," Hurd said. "If you're a customer, the key message I want you to hear is you can sleep well tonight, knowing you've got tremendous energy, power and investment behind this."

IBM and Sun continue to take on Itanium strongly, but Hurd and Otellini said they'll be taking the offensive with the chip. "We're going to go get aggressive in the marketplace. We put a lot into this, and we've got a lot more coming," Hurd said. Itanium allies have pledged to spend $10bn (£6bn) advancing the Itanium technology and market in the next five years, and $1bn a year of that is from HP, he said.

And Otellini said HP Integrity servers using the next-generation Montecito Itanium chips will be the turning point. "The Integrity machine based on Montecito is really the machine we've been waiting for, the machine our collective sales forces can get behind," Otellini said. "I think you'll see customer adoption rates much faster than you'd expect."

Ellison, too, offered superlatives in his video appearance. "There is no more important platform for Oracle than HP and Itanium," he said.

A key part of the Oracle move is to release software not just for powerful back-end systems, but also to midrange servers, Judson Althoff, vice-president of platform and distribution alliances at Oracle, said in an interview. HP welcomed the move.

"Our customers at HP-Oracle shops have been saying, 'We want the complete portfolio.' We had bits and pieces, but we didn't have the entire thing," Rich Marcello, head of the Integrity products, said in an interview before the event. HP didn't want to wait for Oracle's Project Fusion, which merges components from Oracle's software with products from major companies it has acquired, including PeopleSoft and JD Edwards.

One such customer is Scott Womer, the manager of systems engineering at Atmos Energy. He just installed the Oracle E-business Suite on HP Linux systems using Intel Xeon processors. He would have preferred Itanium models, he said, but the systems had to be running in March.

"We just failed to get our E-Business Suite on Itanium because of the timing issue," he said. "The presentation today makes me feel a lot better about that."

For the computing industry, Itanium has been a cautionary tale. The chip once was expected to dominate the computing industry, but that grand vision fell victim to product delays, poor performance and software incompatibilities with x86 chips.

Itanium is central to HP's effort to remain powerful in the high-end server market and for Intel's effort to penetrate it.

While application availability has been a major problem for Itanium, there are currently 7,100 applications available for the beleaguered processor, Marcello said.

"We're getting close to being done. We've identified that when we get around 9,000, we've done all the homework," Marcello said.

Also at Thursday's event, HP drew attention to pricing moves by Oracle. In December, Oracle lowered software prices for multicore chips. Oracle no longer charges twice as much for dual-core Intel processors, including Montecito, the first dual-core Itanium model, which was delayed but is due later this year.

Oracle prices software based on how many processors a server has. In the past, Oracle counted a processor core as a full processor. But now for multicore Intel and AMD chips, the license fee is half the full-processor amount per core. By contrast, the license fee for IBM's dual-core Power models is three-quarters the full-processor fee for each core.

"We are partnering with Oracle to take on IBM and DB2," Marcello said.

Oracle is making another new pricing move. HP servers can be carved up into multiple partitions, and now Oracle will charge based on the number of processors in a partition running its software, Marcello said. Previously, Oracle counted all the processors even if many were devoted to other tasks.

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