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Ellisson: Amazon Databases are 20 Years’ behind

Ellison shared detailed analysis during his keynote that showed how the new Oracle DBaaS delivers unparalleled performance for analytics

In his keynote presentation at Oracle OpenWorld 2016 in San Francisco’s Moscone Center, Oracle Executive Chairman and Chief Technology Officer, Larry Ellison shared detailed analysis that showed that Oracle Database-as-a-Service (DBaaS) is up to 105X faster for Analytics workloads, 35X faster for OLTP, and 1000+X faster for mixed workloads than Amazon DBaaS. Ellison also showed that the Oracle Cloud is optimized for running Oracle Database while Amazon Web Services (AWS) is not. An Oracle Database running on the Oracle Cloud is up to 24X faster than an Oracle Database running on AWS.

“Oracle’s new technologies will drive the Cloud databases and infrastructure of the future,” said Ellison. “Amazon are decades behind in every database area that matters, and their systems are more closed than mainframe computers.”

He further added, “Amazon databases are 20 years behind the latest release of the Oracle Database in the Cloud.”
Ellison also announced the availability of Oracle Database 12c Release 2 in the Oracle Cloud with the launch of the new Oracle Exadata Express Cloud Service. This service provides the full enterprise edition of the Oracle Database running on the database-optimized Exadata infrastructure. Starting at just $175 per month, Ellison showed this Cloud service is lower cost than similar offerings from Amazon.

With the launch of Oracle Database 12c Release 2 in the Cloud first, Oracle has demonstrated that the Oracle Cloud is the most optimized, complete and integrated Cloud for Oracle Database. The latest release provides organizations of all sizes with access to the world’s fastest, most scalable and reliable database technology in a cost-effective and open Cloud environment. In addition, the world’s #1 database includes a series of innovations that add state-of-the-art technology while preserving customer investments and supporting their transition to the Cloud.

Ellison shared detailed analysis during his keynote that showed how the new Oracle DBaaS delivers unparalleled performance for analytics, online transaction processing (OLTP) and mixed database workloads. In a direct comparison between Oracle DBaaS and Amazon databases, Ellison shared the following analysis:

  • Oracle Cloud Database is dramatically faster than Amazon Cloud Databases:
    • Oracle Cloud is up to 105X faster for analytics than Amazon Redshift
    • Oracle Cloud is up to 35X faster for OLTP than Amazon Aurora
  • Amazon is 20 years behind Oracle in database technology
    • Amazon Aurora is missing critical OLTP features that Oracle shipped 20 years ago, including scalable read-write clusters, parallel SQL and the ability to replicate encrypted databases
    • Amazon Redshift is missing critical analytics features that Oracle shipped 20 years ago, including table partitioning, materialized views, support for rich data types and sophisticated query optimization
  • Amazon databases do not support mixed workloads
    • Oracle runs analytics workloads 1000+ times faster than Amazon Aurora
    • Oracle runs OLTP workloads 1000+ times faster than Amazon Redshift
  • Amazon databases are more closed than IBM Mainframe databases, and are not compatible with on-premise enterprise database applications
    • Amazon Aurora, Amazon Redshift and Amazon DynamoDB only run on AWS
    • With AWS, organizations can’t use dev/test for on-premises, can’t use disaster protection for on-premises, management is incompatible with on-premises
    • Amazon databases are not compatible with existing enterprise database applications such as Oracle,

DB2, SQL Server and Teradata and force organizations to throw away decades of on-premises investments

  • Ellison also demonstrated that AWS is not optimized for the Oracle Database:
    • Oracle Database is up to 24X faster for analytics on the Oracle Cloud Platform than on Amazon Web Services
    • Oracle Database is up to 8X faster for OLTP on the Oracle Cloud Platform than on Amazon Web Services
    • AWS has limited storage performance: Amazon Elastic Block Storage limited to 48,000 IOPs/nodes, which is 8X slower than Oracle Cloud; Amazon Elastic Block Storage limited to 800 MB/sec/node, which is 19X slower than Oracle Cloud
    • AWS cannot scale-out Oracle across nodes: AWS provides no support for Oracle Real Application Clusters

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