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Friday, March 11. 2005
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Oracle Spatial SIG - A canyon in the sand
Oracle held its first Oracle Spatial Special Interest Group (SIG) meeting in Denver yesterday. The meeting was ostensibly about getting together the users from North America to form a SIG like many other such user's groups. But from my perspective, the presentations by key Oracle personnel were aimed squarely at blowing the doors open on their strategy to more aggressively attack the enterprise computing market with location technology. Previously, I had written that Oracle could smother other GIS vendors because of the technology being built into Oracle Spatial (LRS, topology, geocoding, GeoRaster datatype). Oracle has always said they did not want to compete with the GIS vendors and wanted them as partners. I think that's true. But Oracle seems to view GIS as a minor information toolset when compared to the potential of geospatially-enabling, well, everything else, from traditional markets to non-traditional ones like life sciences. So, given the future intentions of how Oracle wants to attack global information markets with location-based solutions (Business Intelligence, web services, mobility, etc.) there was a little more than a line in the sand being drawn...more like a canyon. The line was not drawn between Oracle and ESRI or MapInfo or Autodesk, but between IBM, Microsoft, and SAP; companies that are far behind the geospatial database curve, in particular in terms of marketing their location-enabling functionality. This was a wake up call to those companies and a clarion call to systems integrators like Accenture, BearingPoint, and KPMG to tout the strengths and opportunities that Oracle is positioned to develop and to join them on their side of the canyon rim. More on this later...
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