back to article Oracle cans IBM attack ad after ticking off from watchdog

Oracle has pulled an attack advert that claimed its Exadata system is twenty times faster than IBM Power systems - because it isn't, and an advertising watchdog wasn't impressed. The ad compared an IBM Power system database performance at a European retailer with the same databases running on Exadata. The retailer found they …

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  1. Jean-Luc
    Joke

    Typos corrected

    "disappointed with the NAD’s decision in this matter, which it believes is unduly broad and will severely limit the ability to lie in advertising, not only for Oracle but for others in the commercial hardware and software industry”

  2. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Oracle is blatantly misinforming people. Someone should call them on this stuff. Legacy Sun would have never agreed to this nonsense.

    1. Daniel B.

      Sun

      The former Sun employees were relegated to second-class citizens in Oracle. Quite a lot of them got tired of getting pushed aside and threw the towel. You'll find quite a bunch of consultants out there that have Sun Microsystems in their CV...

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Sun

        Agree, the core of Sun talent pool disbanded after the Oracle acquisition, and in the prior years.

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Re: Sun were the acquired company

        I think the groups who took it hardest were Hardware sales and development as they were both used to getting their own way and treating the Software groups like second-class citizens, suddenly when they were treated the same way they didn't like it so much.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Legacy Sun Marketing is no loss

      How quickly we forget how awful they were.

  3. Dig

    alternative

    why not advertise this case study then offer twice your money back if your exadata system doesn't give you 20 times the performance. Money where mouth is and all that.

    1. Spearchucker Jones
      Boffin

      Re: alternative

      That's based on the premise that Oracle is ethical. I think you have more chances of seeing an ironing board doing brain surgery.

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: alternative

      because Oracle is unethical, but not stupid

  4. LordHighFixer
    Devil

    IMHO

    Oracle is like a redheaded stepchild, who proudly says "look at my pretty dolly", to which the rest of the world is saying "you ripped the head off your dolly, and we don't think that was nice". I am glad IBM came around and shoved them back in the closet. Now if we could just get somebody to lock the door. Maybe that pervy old uncle, Sam, will play with them for a while and make them cry, just a little.....

  5. Destroy All Monsters Silver badge
    Devil

    Really, it says there "up to 20x faster queries". The people in charge of the moneybog DO KNOW that this MEANS "we ultimately managed to find a query, that, if optimized in a very special way (compiler options include at least the options -abcdefgh), performed 15 times faster than a similar query on a nonoptimized software-hardware combination of the competitor which had about half the CPUs and half the RAM of our machine and which ran generic softwar"

    Right?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      oh, and

      since the customer is buying new kit, that probably means that the comparison is with previous-generation IBM kit.

      On the other other hand, the big boys (IBM included) have been doing "case studies" based on competitors' old kit against their own latest-and-greatest for at least the 25 years that I've worked in this business.

      1. keith_w
        Big Brother

        Re: oh, and

        are you spreading Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt about IBM's truthfullness and Ethics?

      2. Captain Scarlet

        Re: oh, and

        Case studies using old kit vs new kit are done by most companies in some way, personally I tend to ignore these unless its against their own products (even then different configs can be used to boost certain stats of newer machines, so again if it looks like they are deliberately making old kit look rubbish I close).

    2. Billl
      Happy

      re: Destroy All Monsters

      I completely agree. That's kinda Oracles point though. They optimize the stack so you don't have to. There's also some special sauce in there, but the beauty is in the simplicity and consistency. Of course, if it were just better integration then HP and IBM could actually be competitive with Exadata. So far, from the testimonials (read customers), Exadata is blowing everyone away on real customer data. You'd think that IBM would come up with a competitive engineered system if it were just integration of components. It's an engineered system right? IBM has engineers I assume?

  6. superboer

    if ibm play there cards right they'll win this easyly...

    have been involved in a benchmark a decade ago where informix was faster on a 12 cpu sun solaris machine with 12 GB of memory then obstacle on a 64 cpu sun solaris machine with 64 GB of memory.

    i guess they bet on the fact that IBM does not put informix against them.... if IBM does put informix in there

    this whole thing will blow up on obstacle...........

    it would certainly make my whole year ok....

    Superboer

  7. Shannon Jacobs
    Holmes

    Moore's Law in action?

    The way I interpreted the ad, it seemed a trivial upgrade if the old system was more than a few years old... As long as Moore's Law holds out, we sort of expect every new system to have a hardware advantage.

    Having said that, I better ad the disclaimers that I'm in the IBM food chain and I think all ads are extremely dubious these years. What I'd like to see is a progressive tax on idle cash that the corporations are sitting on.

    1. RegGuy1 Silver badge

      Results may vary...

      I notice they put this disclaimer at the bottom: "Individual results depend on a number of factors. Actual results may vary."

      Didn't they miss off 'may contain nuts' (or should that be 'we are nuts').

    2. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Moore's Law in action?

      Oracle's benchmarks generally state "SDD out performs HDD". That is the major contributing factor. They really need to get crazy, beyond storage, to make Sparc look competitive.

  8. David 14
    Happy

    There is no comparison in overall quality, scalability and reliability.

    Oracle's Exadata system is an Intel-based cluster of servers, so the database scales horizontally which will work well for some workloads... it also is exceptionally complicated to manage and tune compared to a "regular" database, and the hardware is good for one thing only... the databases.

    IBM Power servers are general-purpose computing environments that can scale from 4-core machines up to 256-core machines... and the level of virtualization and the robustness of the environment is second to none!

    The kicker for many companies is that they get caught up on the sticker price of the hardware, rather than the big-picture, total cost management view of things which will include software, downtime, risk, management, longevity, etc.

    And, for the record, I sell and architect solutions based on Oracle, IBM, and HP hardware... but the winner in the enterprise compute environment is a clear one in my mind and experience.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Agree, IBM's Power systems are definitely the gold standard.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        $$$$$

        You certainly pay Gold for the system, plus GS to set it up, plus, plus, plus......

        1. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          Re: $$$$$

          GS doesn't install Power systems... they implement Oracle and SAP, run IT operations, etc. The VARs implement Power systems, same as ever other provider. Power systems are less costly than Itanium and Sparc. Power with Linux pretty close to the cost of x86 - Linux and it is an integrated system as compared to a bunch of components.

  9. Ascylto
    Big Brother

    23456

    Oh, did they forget the bit about IBM systems being used by the Nazis to identify Jews in the last World War?

    How soon we forget.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: 23456

      IBM systems were used by basically every country in the world in those days. They also were the systems used to manage US war production and defeat the Nazis. You can't blame the tool maker for how their tools are used. I am sure some computer company supplied systems in the Sudan as well, but I would blame the people using those systems... not whoever happened to make them.

  10. J.T

    Exadata is fast at queries...that involve lots of where statements, as long as you don't need to do a lot writes, as long as your front and back end aren't too busy with columnar compression CPU time, as long as your database isn't that big, as long as you have all the patches with data loss and unavability bugs loaded, as long as the software raid doesn't have two hard drive failures.

    And then you get the HVAC bill. And then the Oracle maintenance bill.

    Interestingly, right when Oracle hit the market full press with the second generation hardware, there was a bug in ASM with red hat where it would use the /dev instead of the multipath devices. Strange timing, performance limiting bug at that time.

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