Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 22nd Sep 2009 20:17 UTC
SUN Microsystems When the news broke that Oracle wanted to buy Sun, a number of eyebrows were raised over what would happen to Sun's open source portfolio. While the US Department of Justice gave the green light for the deal to go through, the European Commission was among the eye brows raising crowd, and they were quite worried about the future of specifically MySQL.
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Why is this news?
by Lunitik on Tue 22nd Sep 2009 23:08 UTC
Lunitik
Member since:
2005-08-07

They tried to acquire MySQL for $750 million before Sun snapped them up for a billion. They already own the core technology originally for it (InnoDB) so it should be good having those communities coming back together...

People that thought Oracle didn't have plans for MySQL forget facts too quickly... although it will likely mean that Oracle will always ensure their own products add value to it - MySQL AB already made money by not opening everything they offered... what changes there? Nothing except Oracle - the guys that made us need a database - adding to it, hardly a bad thing.

Oracle has been on board with open source almost as long as IBM, they too do "Mixed Source" but that mixed source includes a LOT of investment in Open Source.

Don't be surprised to see MySQL targeted more at their Fusion middleware, with their core Enterprise business remaining as is.

Edited 2009-09-22 23:12 UTC

RE: Why is this news?
by segedunum on Wed 23rd Sep 2009 09:21 in reply to "Why is this news?"
segedunum Member since:
2005-07-06

The MySQL comments certainly aren't news. You're right. Yes, I doubt whether Oracle will let MySQL compete too much with Oracle's database products but it isn't going to fall off the edge of a cliff.

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2

RE[2]: Why is this news?
by Lunitik on Wed 23rd Sep 2009 12:27 in reply to "RE: Why is this news?"
Lunitik Member since:
2005-08-07

Well, I mean, I'd think they'd start offering parts of their traditional database software as an upgrade... OracleDB wasn't really designed for the web, but Fusion was... easier to just use something else that was designed for the web... aka MySQL

Reply Parent Bookmark Score: 2