What I am more concerned about at the moment is how much the uncertainty
over the deal is hurting MySQL?
I was recently in a project planning meeting where MySQL was dismissed
completely because nobody could give guarantees about where MySQL was
going. There were a lot of concerns over where
I believe MySQL will still have great influence in Open Source area.
The better is that MySQL will be a separate Company which has no relation to
Sun and Oracle.
Maybe Oracle can sell MySQL to a 3rd company.
2009/11/11 John Daisley john.dais...@butterflysystems.co.uk
What I am more concerned
On Nov 11, 2009, at 9:34 AM, John Daisley wrote:
On Tue, 2009-11-10 at 23:50 -0600, Peter Brawley wrote:
European regulators agree with Monty that the Oracle-Sun deal threatens
database competition. Apparently Oracle means to play hardball. Meanwhile
Sun revenue fell 25% in 3rd quarter 2009;
On Nov 11, 2009, at 9:34 AM, John Daisley wrote:
On Tue, 2009-11-10 at 23:50 -0600, Peter Brawley wrote:
European regulators agree with Monty that the Oracle-Sun deal threatens
database competition. Apparently Oracle means to play hardball.
Meanwhile
Sun revenue fell 25% in 3rd quarter 2009;
n'importe
quel effet légalement obligatoire. Étant donné que les email peuvent facilement
être sujets à la manipulation, nous ne pouvons accepter aucune responsabilité
pour le contenu fourni.
Date: Wed, 11 Nov 2009 12:48:28 +
Subject: Re: Oracle, Sun and MySQL
From: j
European regulators agree with Monty that the Oracle-Sun deal threatens
database competition. Apparently Oracle means to play hardball. Meanwhile
Sun revenue fell 25% in 3rd quarter 2009; who else but an anti-competitive
giant would take a chance on buying Sun now? Story here: