SAN FRANCISCO Oracle jumped onto the increasingly crowded social-networking gravy train Oct. 5 when its co-founder and CEO Larry Ellison introduced the enterprise-oriented Oracle Social Network as a key part of its evolving cloud strategy.
Ellison also took the wraps off his company’s newest cloud-oriented middleware products and strategy, called Oracle Public Cloud, in an afternoon keynote at the OpenWorld 2011 conference.
The Oracle Public Cloud will offer companies a new, more centralized way to obtain integrated cloud-supported applications and infrastructure for their data centers. It also will enable IT managers with Oracle shops to deploy in quicker fashion the newest Fusion applications, middleware not to mention databases. Naturally, it is all hosted and managed by Oracle.
The Oracle Social Network will become the entry user interface to the Oracle Public Cloud. Companies will be able to control access to their own sites within the cloud, and may allow (or disallow, as needed) executives, employees, contractors, partners, customers, consultants and applicants the entire gamut of people doing business interaction.
The internal network allows users not only to collaborate in real time on projects, useful information and content, but it also connects to the more than 100 Fusion applications currently available. These include HR, CRM, and financial and employee-benefit applications.
Like any other cloud service, the new Oracle cloud is designed to enable IT shops to get as much capacity as they need on demand. Oracle Public Cloud also will allow enterprises to toggle between software as a service (SaaS) and on-premise versions of their applications at any point after deployment, "because the apps are all built on the same code base," Ellison said.
Ellison also announced new Oracle Fusion CRM and Human Capital Management cloud services, in addition to the Oracle Java Cloud Service and Oracle Database Cloud Service.
Basically, any application, middleware, database or Web service developer can now obtain the tools and applications they need through the overall cloud service.
To read the original eWeek article, click here: Oracle Launches Own Social Network for Cloud Services