Oracle’s explosive growth, dispersed data centers, industry partnerships, and dynamic CEO have made it the hottest cloud vendor today.
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Oracle maintains its position as the world’s hottest major cloud vendor with 54% growth in Q2, followed by Google Cloud at 28% and ServiceNow at 25%.
The Wiz cloud security platform gives comprehensive control over customers’ cloud infrastructure and applications, while providing a visual ‘Graph’ of the environment.
Approaching the release of the Q2 financial results of Amazon, AWS’ growth rate decline stands out relative to Cloud Wars Top 10 adversaries.
Although it’s not as big as other Cloud Wars Top 10 companies, the growth rate of Oracle has been accelerating at a higher rate than that of competitors.
Market-leading growth rate, compared with the decline in AWS’ growth, raises the specter of Oracle overtaking Amazon in the Cloud Wars Top 10.
Bob revisits the Cloud Wars Top 10 rankings as the latest growth rates of Oracle might move it up the ranks past Amazon’s AWS.
Per Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, Oracle MySQL HeatWave runs 1,000x faster than competitor AWS’ Aurora database, writes Bob Evans.
With its EU Sovereign Cloud, Oracle aims to address common risks associated with data residency, privacy, and management.
Based on its recent growth rates and ambitious outlook for the future, Oracle has earned a spot in the “hyperscaler club,” alongside Microsoft, AWS, and Google Cloud.
As Oracle announced its partnership with Cohere, the company is making further moves to integrate generative AI into its portfolio and services.
As a result of its surge in cloud revenue and impressive growth rates, Bob Evans suggests that Oracle has joined Microsoft, AWS, and Google Cloud as the fourth hyperscaler.
Bob Evans offers five reasons for Oracle’s massive growth surge, which include the company’s technological superiority and leaders Safra Catz and Larry Ellison.
Bob Evans shares five key reasons that influenced Oracle’s surge in cloud growth in its most recent quarter.
Bob Evans breaks down the latest changes to the Cloud Wars Top 10 ranking, in which ServiceNow, Workday, and Google Cloud moved up.
Staying on track as the world’s hottest cloud provider, Oracle crushed Q4 with a 54% growth rate and quarterly cloud revenue of $4.4 billion.
With a 54% cloud growth rate in its most recent quarter and quarterly cloud revenue of $4.4 billion, Oracle remains the fastest growing cloud provider.
Wayne Sadin and Bob Evans discuss the needs of the modern CIO in this Cloud Wars Live episode.
There are unique endpoint security challenges associated with cloud-based systems. Here are some strategies to address them.
Bob Evans and Bonnie Tinder discuss takeaways from recent Oracle Summits that they have both attended in the latest Cloud Wars Live episode.