Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Oracle Exadata (Exadata [1]) is a computing system optimized for running Oracle Databases. Exadata is a combined hardware and software platform that includes scale-out x86-64 compute and storage servers, RoCE networking, RDMA-addressable memory acceleration, NVMe flash, and specialized software.
"Data warehouse appliance" is a term coined by Foster Hinshaw, [1] [2] the founder of Netezza.In creating the first data warehouse appliance, Hinshaw and Netezza used the foundations developed by Model 204, Teradata, and others, to pioneer a new category to address consumer analytics efficiently by providing a modular, scalable, easy-to-manage database system that’s cost effective.
The Oracle Zero Data Loss Recovery Appliance [1] (Recovery Appliance or ZDLRA) is a computing platform that includes Oracle Corporation (Oracle) Engineered Systems hardware and software built for backup and recovery of the Oracle Database. It performs continuous data protection, validates backups, automatically resolves many issues, and ...
HP P10000 3PAR Storage System. The HPE Storage (formerly HP StorageWorks) is a portfolio of Hewlett Packard Enterprise storage products, includes online storage, nearline storage , storage networking, archiving, de-duplication, and storage software.
It is a cluster of x86-64-servers running Oracle Linux or Solaris preinstalled. Its full trade mark is Oracle Exalogic Elastic Cloud (derived from the SI prefix exa-and -logic, probably from Weblogic), positioned by the vendor as a preconfigured clustered application server to use for cloud computing with elastic computing abilities. [2]
Oracle Database is available by several service providers on-premises, on-cloud, or as a hybrid cloud installation. It may be run on third party servers as well as on Oracle hardware (Exadata on-premises, on Oracle Cloud or at Cloud at Customer). [5] Oracle Database uses SQL for database updating and retrieval. [6]
[citation needed] In 2011, the company announced the Oracle Database Appliance as a smaller, less powerful alternative to Oracle Exadata at a lower price point. [3] [4] According to industry analysts, Oracle expected the Oracle Database Appliance to fill the gap in its product line beneath Oracle Exadata, targeting mid-market customers. [5]
This page was last edited on 16 April 2011, at 09:34 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may ...