Re: DISTRIBUTED OBJECT technology in ORACLE8:
Date: Fri, 11 Mar 1994 11:44:02 GMT
Message-ID: <1994Mar11.114402.75921_at_hursley.ibm.com>
In <1994Mar10.064044.11484_at_bMD.com>, Neil Greene <Neil_at_bMD.com> writes:
"Oracle has taken the most aggressive stance when it comes to
migrating its database technology to object structures. When the Redwood
City, Calif. company releases Oracle version 8 next year, it will include
integrated object technology. 'This is not a few hundred lines of code'
says J. Dash, Oracle VP of product strategy. 'We are making changes to
the kernel' ".
Also the article mentioned alliances between Object technology
vendors and RDBMS vendors. (I think there is an Informix/ODI alliance?)
May Oracle team up with NeXT? After all Oracle CEO, Larry Ellison
sits on NeXT's board of directors...
If Oracle chooses NeXT as its Object technology partner,
would [NeXT's] Enterprise Objects be what Oracle is looking for??
Here's an excerpt form the NEXTSTEP Expo announcement (March 07, '94):
"...NeXT will announce..Enterprise Objects..,
a technology that utilize industry standard relational databases
(like ORACLE and Sybase) to provide persistance storage."
>> If ORACLE8 implements a CORBA compliant ORB (object request
>In article <1994Mar9.152712.47435_at_hursley.ibm.com>
>ravi_mendis_at_hursley.ibm.com writes:
[stuff deleted..]
>>
>> Anyone know any details of ORACLE's object technology
>>plans/partnerships?
>
>I would be very interested in hearing more about this, even if it is just
>hear say and dreams. Any chance on finding some serious leads on these
>possabilities.
>
>Neil Greene
>
Well, there's an article in Information Week, 21 Feb '94, which talks about
the rush by RDBMS vendors to incorporate Object technology into their
systems:
>> (a system which provides object storage and persistance in a standard
>>RDBMS)
>> then ORACLE8 would become an Object Repository as well as a Data
>>Server!!!??
So maybe the changes planned for the kernel server are ORB services? And sitting on top of that would be the Enterprise Object Framework. This sounds a robust and powerful method of extending the use of a RDBMS to object technology, don't you???!!!
ravi
||=============================================================|| || Ravi Mendis ..personally yours; NOT an IBM spokesperson! || ||=============================================================|| || internet: ravi_mendis_at_vnet.ibm.com OR GBIBM9MG_at_IBMMAIL.COM || ||=============================================================||Received on Fri Mar 11 1994 - 12:44:02 CET