Compliance Week: Compliance Week: Universal Set of Auditing :: Nov 25, 2008 When it comes to auditing rules, however, no overt objective to move the United States toward the international platform exists—but it’s http://www.complianceweek.com/article/5161/universal-set-of-auditing-standards-a-possibilityHOME | Oracle said it's developed a more comprehensive archiving solution for
customers concerned with compliance issues as well as those needing to
search through an expanding number of data types. Oracle's Universal Online
Archive and E-mail Archive Service are set for release this year.
Both Archive products are components of Oracle's Fusion Middleware and
already available on Oracle's price lists, though company officials were coy
about an official release. The debut was timed for today at Collaborate 2008
in Denver, a major gathering of three independent Oracle user groups.
"As we've been talking to customers in the content management space, for
a variety of reasons including compliance and search, a lot of them are
looking to Oracle to really scale these systems to meet new demands," Andy
MacMillan, an Oracle executive for the company's content management line,
told Universal Thread Conference Coverage - Visual FoxPro DevCon 1997:: I also designed and developed Oracle databases for VFP apps. . On-line help will move away from the traditional .HLP toward the more manageable, http://www.utcoverage.com/SanDiego/HOME | The Move Toward Shared Services: An Examination of the Business :: The paper moves from outlining the business case for Shared Services toward a discussion of architectural control points and service features. http://www.informationweek.com/whitepaper/Internet/wp903529;jsessionid=null?articleID=903529HOME | InternetNews.com.
MacMillan described the E-mail Archive Service as a single repository
companies can use to archive data from a range of sources from Lotus Notes
and Microsoft Exchange and Sharepoint to non-Oracle Enterprise Content
Management Systems (CMS).
These latest content management solutions build on Oracle's current
content management solutions, though MacMillan said it's also an opportunity
to win new business. "We take into account a wide vary of customer data
types, not just Oracle," he said.
IDC analyst Vivian Gopico-Tero said Oracle (NASDAQ: ORCL) is addressing
enterprises need to better deal with growing mounds of information and
streamline operations.
"Universal Online Archives is a strategic sell since it requires
companies to consider their preferred architecture for managing content
(beyond email) in the back end," Gopico-Tero, told d InternetNews.com
via email.
"In light of current calls for more stringent regulations and
expectations of rising audits and actions from the plaintiff bar (due to the
sub-prime mess) we do not anticipate a slowdown in compliance spending
. We
anticipate Oracle to benefit from this trend."
And it's a trend Oracle's been developing for against well-established competitors.
Last fall Oracle rolled
out Universal Records Management 10g Release 3, a platform that includes
enhanced retention and management features for e-mail and other files stored
in corporate datacenters.
Gopico-Tero said Oracle faces competition from traditional CMS players as
well as storage and management giants like EMC and IBM which are developing
better ways to consolidate the management of multiple forms of content.
In the near term, she said the new offerings will probably have the
greatest appeal to existing Oracle Fusion Middleware customers, particularly
those it gained from its 2006 $440
million acquisition of content management provider Stellent, which don't have a messaging archive application or are looking to consolidate multiple message archives into a single platform.
Universal Online Archive is expected to sell for $20 per named user plus
or $75,000 per CPU. E-mail Archive Service is slated to sell for $50 per
named user plus or $40,000 per CPU.
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