Oracle FAQ Your Portal to the Oracle Knowledge Grid
HOME | ASK QUESTION | ADD INFO | SEARCH | E-MAIL US
 

Home -> Community -> Usenet -> c.d.o.server -> Re: OMLETv4 The Ultimate Visual Real Time Oracle Monitoring Tool

Re: OMLETv4 The Ultimate Visual Real Time Oracle Monitoring Tool

From: omlet <notrolls_at_notrolls.omlet.org.notrolls>
Date: Tue, 20 Jul 2004 01:57:36 -0400
Message-ID: <0ffb39b4d1053fee192f659e0675397f@localhost.talkaboutdatabases.com>


Dear DBA,

You are cordially invited to test and review our windows native and 100% pure Java Oracle 9i/8i Monitoring Application (OMLET). OMLET is the Ultimate Visual Real Time Oracle Monitoring Tool. As the leading expert in your field, your objective opinion is highly valued and your feedback is very appreciated. We would like to encourage you to distribute free copies of OMLET to your associates and fellow DBAs.

Omlet can be downloaded from:

http://www.omlet.org/download.html

or any of many mirrors worldwide:

http://www.geocities.com/teraknowledgesystems/download.html

iboogie.com/search.asp?name_search_type=1&name_lang=50&name_query=omlet+oracle  

Thank you for your time, positive feedback.

Cheers,

The OMLET Team
Tera Knowledge Systems, Inc.

PS. If you feel that this is spam and you read this by mistake, we apologize, ignore it and have a nice day

Steve Howard wrote:

> Has anyone actually downloaded this thing? No matter if he/she is
> spamming or not, I fear he/she is _extremely_ late to the party. It
> looked fairly basic too. People are beter off to the use OEM, which
> is actually supported by a real company.
>
> I used to try to reinvent the wheel too, which I still argue is a
> useful learning tool. I remember writing an Excel based tool with
> ODBC about seven years ago, and then a java based one four years or so
> ago. Useful for me, yes. But marketable?
>
> Do we really need another java based database montitoring tool?
> Aren't there like 50,000 of these things out there?
>
> Like I said, I don't appreciate the spamming, either. But even given
> that, the product appeared to be essentially worthless, or at least
> extremely far-flung in terms of alternatives.
>
> My .002
>
>
> Steve

I had a student do it and it was carefully evaluated.

The result ... predictable.

I'd rather trust my data to a rabid dog.

Daniel Morgan

Is he a girlie rabid dog like you? Received on Tue Jul 20 2004 - 00:57:36 CDT

Original text of this message

HOME | ASK QUESTION | ADD INFO | SEARCH | E-MAIL US