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On Wed, 11 Sept, 12:02 AM UTC
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HeatWave Innovation Rolls on with New Generative AI and Multicloud Capabilities By Investing.com
HeatWave GenAI now provides integrated, automated, and secure generative AI to AWS customers Vector processing with HeatWave on AWS and OCI offers 39X better price performance than Snowflake (NYSE:SNOW), 96X better than Databricks, and 48X better than Google (NASDAQ:GOOGL) Big Query , /PRNewswire/ -- Oracle CloudWorld -- Oracle today announced new HeatWave capabilities, including innovations to help organizations more easily and securely take advantage of generative AI both in Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) and in Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) Web Services (AWS). Additional new capabilities help customers quickly and securely implement lakehouse and machine learning applications for a wider variety of use cases, as well as help improve the performance and manageability of transactional applications. "Our track record of delivering powerful new HeatWave capabilities that are automated, integrated, and secure now extends to AI. Some organizations, such as SmarterD, are building new generative AI applications on HeatWave and moving into production in less than a month," said , chief corporate architect, Oracle. "To enable more customers to take advantage of our innovations, including HeatWave GenAI with in-database LLMs, we are making them available natively on AWS. This enables AWS users to build rich generative AI applications without the need for AI expertise, without complex manual integrations and troubleshooting, and without the security risks and costs of moving their data to separate services." "The integration of generative AI in HeatWave is a major leap forward for us," said , CTO and founder, SOCOBOX. "By bringing in-database LLMs, automated vector processing, AutoML, and lakehouse into our workflows, we can now deliver powerful AI-driven insights and applications without the overhead of external tools. This comprehensive approach not only simplifies our operations but also ensures real-time, cost-effective solutions that resonate with the demands of our customers." Organizations applying analytics, transaction processing, machine learning, and generative AI across various data types and sources can leverage new HeatWave capabilities, including: HeatWave on AWS AWS customers can reduce complexity by replacing up to six AWS services with HeatWave. New HeatWave capabilities on AWS, which are also available on OCI, include: HeatWave GenAI By providing integrated, automated, and secure generative AI, HeatWave GenAI lets developers build new generative AI applications without AI expertise, data movement, or additional cost. New capabilities include: HeatWave MySQL HeatWave MySQL enables OLTP workloads to leverage the Enterprise Edition features of MySQL Database and delivers unique capabilities, such as Auto Shape Prediction, Auto Thread Pooling, Autopilot Indexing, and in-database JavaScript. New capabilities include: HeatWave Lakehouse HeatWave Lakehouse enables users to query hundreds of terabytes of data in object storage with the best price-performance in the industry. HeatWave Lakehouse can uniquely query data in object storage at the same speed as database queries without the need to copy the data from the object store to the database. New capabilities include: HeatWave AutoML HeatWave AutoML includes everything users need to build, train, and explain machine learning models within HeatWave at no additional cost. It provides support for classification, regression, anomaly detection, recommender systems, and time series forecasting. New capabilities include: HeatWave Available in Oracle Cloud Free Tier HeatWave is now available in the OCI Always Free Service, which enables organizations to develop and run small-scale applications using HeatWave MySQL, analytics, machine learning, JavaScript, HeatWave Vector Store, and process data in object store. All OCI accounts get access to a standalone HeatWave instance in OCI in their home region, along with 50 GB of storage and 50 GB of backup storage, for an unlimited time. They also receive of credit to use for all eligible OCI services for up to 30 days. Additional Resources About Oracle Oracle offers integrated suites of applications plus secure, autonomous infrastructure in the Oracle Cloud. For more information about Oracle (NYSE: ORCL), please visit us at oracle.com. About Oracle CloudWorld CloudWorld is where our customers and partners can see the latest innovations in cloud technology, discover methods for getting the most business value from AI today, and explore ways to increase productivity and efficiency through automation. You'll learn from experts and your peers who build and use the applications, cloud infrastructure, databases, developer tools, and AI services that help solve complex business challenges in every industry. Join us to develop new skills and see new capabilities in action. Register now at oracle.com/cloudworld or follow the news and conversation at oracle.com/news and linkedin.com/company/oracle. Future Product Disclaimer The preceding is intended to outline our general product direction. It is intended for information purposes only, and may not be incorporated into any contract. It is not a commitment to deliver any material, code, or functionality, and should not be relied upon in making purchasing decisions. The development, release, timing, and pricing of any features or functionality described for Oracle's products may change and remains at the sole discretion of Oracle Corporation (NYSE:ORCL). Forward-Looking Statements Disclaimer Statements in this article relating to Oracle's future plans, expectations, beliefs, and intentions are "forward-looking statements" and are subject to material risks and uncertainties. Many factors could affect Oracle's current expectations and actual results, and could cause actual results to differ materially. A discussion of such factors and other risks that affect Oracle's business is contained in Oracle's Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) filings, including Oracle's most recent reports on Form 10-K and Form 10-Q under the heading "Risk Factors." These filings are available on the SEC's website or on Oracle's website at oracle.com/investor. All information in this article is current as of , and Oracle undertakes no duty to update any statement in light of new information or future events.
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Oracle's Ellison Touts New AWS Partnership, Says AI Is 'An Ongoing Battle For Technical Supremacy'
Oracle and AWS unveiled the partnership just ahead of Oracle's first fiscal quarter earnings call, during which Oracle Chairman and CTO Larry Ellison gave a bullish account of the AI market. Oracle has inked a partnership with Amazon Web Services, creating Oracle Database@AWS, and revealed the general availability of Oracle Database@Google Cloud as the artificial intelligence boom continues. The Austin, Texas-based database product giant and AWS revealed the partnership just ahead of Oracle's first fiscal quarter earnings call Monday, during which Oracle Chairman and CTO Larry Ellison gave a bullish account of the AI market. "If your horizon is over the next five years, maybe even the next 10 years, I wouldn't worry about, 'Hey, we've now trained all the models we need and all we need to do is inferencing,'" Ellison said on the call. "This is an ongoing battle for technical supremacy that will be fought by a handful of companies and maybe one nation-state ... this business is just growing larger and larger and larger. There's no slowdown or shift coming." [RELATED: Microsoft CEO Nadella Calls Joint Oracle Offering A 'Profound' Moment For AI] Asked on the call -- covering Oracle's quarter ended Aug. 31 -- whether the AI market might see less intensive compute needs as AI training gives way to inferencing, Ellison said that "this race goes on forever to build a better and better neural network." "The cost of that training gets to be astronomical. When I talk about building gigawatt or multi-gigawatt data centers ... the entry price for a real frontier model from someone who wants to compete in that area is around $100 billion," Ellison said. "That's over the next four or five years for anyone who wants to play in that game. That's a lot of money, and it doesn't get easier." Oracle is designing a gigawatt-plus data center that has building permits for three small modular nuclear reactors. Oracle's biggest data centers measure around 800 megawatts and its smallest data centers are 150 kilowatts. But the vendor is also at work on data centers down to 50 kilowatts. "This is how crazy it's getting," Ellison said. "This is what's going on." Ellison also used Monday's call to illustrate some compelling AI use cases in health care, including his prediction that computers will handle sensitive procedures like measuring infants' spinal cords and skulls and AI applications updating electronic health records based on what the app hears from a doctor's conversation with a patient. Although he focused on AI in health care, Ellison appeared to criticize AI vendors overall for looking to charge separately for AI agents. "Our applications are going to be primarily 'AI application everything -- 'how do you charge separately for everything?" he said. "I find it bewildering when I listen to them talk. I don't understand what they're saying." In a joint statement, Oracle and Seattle-based cloud giant AWS positioned Oracle Database@AWS as a simpler way to conduct database administration, billing and user support while connecting Oracle data to applications on Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), AWS Analytics services, Amazon Bedrock and other AI and machine learning offerings. Oracle Database@AWS will have a preview release later this year with broader availability in 2025, according to the vendors. Oracle Database@Google Cloud became generally available (GA) for four Google Cloud regions in the U.S. and Europe: U.S. East (Ashburn), U.S. West (Salt Lake City), U.K. South (London) and Germany Central (Frankfurt). More regions worldwide are expected in the coming months, according to the vendors. AWS has been a frequent target of criticism by Ellison over the years, perhaps making the alliance more surprising than the one Oracle formed with rival Microsoft. Oracle Database@Azure became GA in December. "We believe our cloud partnerships with AWS and Microsoft and Google will turbocharge the growth of our database business for years to come," Ellison said on Monday's call. The agreements with the top public cloud providers do not represent Ellison growing sour on private clouds, the CTO made clear Monday. Teaming up with AWS "will absolutely accelerate database growth in the public cloud, but we expect that private clouds will greatly outnumber public cloud" to avoid security and regulatory issues with sharing a cloud with other tenants, he said. "We have 162 data centers now. I expect we will have 1,000 or 2,000 or more Oracle Cloud data centers around the world," he said. "And a lot of them will be dedicated to individual banks or telecommunications companies or technology companies or what have you. Or nation-states, sovereign clouds, all of this other stuff. " Although Ellison said he can't predict which will be bigger, public cloud or private cloud, "the good news is we win either way," he said. He said Oracle public and private clouds are identical in quality, a difference from competitors he did not name on the call. Ellison and CEO Safra Catz offered previews of speeches and news set to come out during the vendor's annual CloudWorld event, being held in Las Vegas from Sept.9 to 12. Ellison said on Monday's call that he will focus on multi-cloud and security, as passwords are going away in favor of facial recognition, fingerprints and biometrics. "That's why Google Pay is popular and Apple Pay is popular," Ellison said. "Look at me and recognize me and log me in. Don't ask me to type in some stupid 17-letter password that someone can steal." Ellison also touted Oracle's new zero trust packet routing technology that should improve network and data security in distributed IT environments. At the event, he will talk about removing humans from database administration and coding to avoid vulnerabilities and misconfigurations, not just to save costs. "There is a whole new generation of AI-based security systems ... that we can use to stop these attacks, but we have to actually deploy the technology," he said. Catz said to expect an announcement around embedded AI agents in Fusion to increase productivity. Oracle reported $13.3 billion in total revenue for the first quarter of fiscal year 2025, an increase of 8 percent year over year ignoring foreign exchange. Total remaining performance obligations hit $99 billion, up 53 percent year over year. Cloud revenue for the quarter was $5.6 billion, up 22 percent ignoring foreign exchange. Cloud infrastructure brought in $2.2 billion in revenue, up 46 percent year over year. Cloud applications brought in $3.5 billion in revenue, up 10 percent year over year. Cloud services revenue grew 22 percent year over year ignoring foreign exchange to $5.6 billion. Cloud license and on-premises license revenue hit $870 million, up 8 percent year over year ignoring foreign exchange. Fusion Cloud ERP revenue was $900 million, up 17 percent year over year ignoring foreign exchange. NetSuite Cloud ERP brought in the same amount, growth of 20 percent year over year. App subscription and product support revenue was up 7 percent year over year to $4.8 billion. Back-office staff apps saw annualized revenue of $8.2 billion, up 18 percent year over year. Infrastructure subscription and license support revenue was $5.8 billion, up 14 percent year over year, according to the vendor. Infrastructure cloud services revenue was up 46 percent -- 49 percent excluding legacy hosting services -- reaching annualized revenue of $8.6 billion. Oracle Cloud Infrastructure consumption revenue grew 56 percent year over year. Cloud database services were up 23 percent year over year, with annualized revenue of $2.1 billion. Oracle spent $2.3 billion on capital expenditures in the quarter to meet demand. Catz said she expects 2025 fiscal year CapEx to double Fiscal Year 2024's. Catz said that data center demand is still exceeding data center supply, with Oracle leaning more on automation for setting up and laying down data centers to speed up the process. "We made the decision, instead of picking up small pieces, to actually wait, in some cases, to pick up larger locations," Catz said. "That is really playing out very, very well for us. But we are really moving and growing in so many places because it's not only public cloud rollout, but it is also private clouds, which are in immense demand; national security regions, immense demand; and really, we are moving as fast as we can." The vendor said it expects second fiscal quarter total revenue to grow 7 percent to 9 percent ignoring foreign exchange. Oracle's stock traded at about $152 a share after market close Monday, up about 9 percent.
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Oracle introduces new generative AI and multicloud capabilities while reporting robust financial results for Q1 2025, with a focus on AI-driven growth and cloud infrastructure expansion.
Oracle Corporation has announced significant advancements in its AI and cloud offerings, showcasing the company's commitment to innovation in the rapidly evolving tech landscape. The company has unveiled new generative AI and multicloud capabilities, further solidifying its position as a leader in enterprise technology solutions 1.
Alongside its technological innovations, Oracle has reported impressive financial results for the first quarter of fiscal year 2025. The company's performance underscores the growing demand for its AI and cloud services, with no signs of slowdown in sight 2.
Oracle's Chairman and CTO, Larry Ellison, has emphasized that the company is not experiencing any AI slowdown or shift in strategy. Instead, Oracle is doubling down on its AI initiatives, recognizing the technology's transformative potential across various industries 2.
To support its AI ambitions and meet growing customer demand, Oracle is making substantial investments in its cloud infrastructure. The company is rapidly expanding its data center capacity, with plans to open new regions and increase the number of availability domains within existing regions 2.
Oracle's HeatWave offering, a key component of its database portfolio, continues to evolve with new capabilities. The latest innovations include enhanced support for generative AI workloads and improved multicloud functionality. These advancements aim to provide customers with greater flexibility and performance in managing their data and AI applications across diverse cloud environments 1.
The positive financial results and ongoing technological innovations have been well-received by the market. Oracle's stock performance and investor confidence reflect the company's strong position in the competitive tech industry. As Oracle continues to invest in AI and cloud technologies, it is poised for further growth and market expansion in the coming quarters 2.
Oracle's Q3 earnings show strong growth in cloud and AI sectors, but fall short of analyst estimates. The company remains optimistic about future AI-driven expansion and infrastructure projects.
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Oracle announces significant expansions to its cloud services and introduces new AI tools, enhancing its offerings across major cloud providers and its own platforms.
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Oracle has announced the world's first zettascale AI supercomputer, featuring 131,072 NVIDIA Blackwell GPUs. This groundbreaking system, delivering 2.4 zettaflops of AI performance, will be available through Oracle Cloud Infrastructure.
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Oracle Corporation's stock surges following impressive Q1 2024 earnings report and announcement of a strategic partnership with Amazon. The company's cloud business shows significant growth, driven by AI-related demand.
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Oracle's Chairman Larry Ellison announces ambitious plans to eliminate passwords and enhance cybersecurity using AI-enabled systems at CloudWorld 2024, promising superior protection against cyber threats.
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