tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5733464449819279412.post6605630238535145252..comments2024-03-27T12:44:11.351+00:00Comments on Debra's thoughts on Oracle: Open World Wrap UpDebra Lilleyhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/06501850988908291461noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5733464449819279412.post-69835309873133300582009-11-08T15:41:55.598+00:002009-11-08T15:41:55.598+00:00Dan and Debra
The "benchmarks" that are...Dan and Debra<br /><br />The "benchmarks" that are being talked about are from work done in the UK by "sister" companies who are doing the same kind of applications that we are.<br /><br />I do not think that these bencmarks take the complete picture of the environment which has a ton of inserts to feed the DW and then a ton of queries mostly of the '%variable%' kind.<br /><br />Glad to know that the actual results from ExaData are much better than Netezza.<br /><br />I am just the small cog or non at all in the decision making. I just have to make things better by not changing any code or settings!Aminhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13355624200176156040noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5733464449819279412.post-9119491761644128592009-11-01T15:45:07.810+00:002009-11-01T15:45:07.810+00:00This on difference between Netezza and Exadata, th...This on difference between Netezza and Exadata, the Exadata SIG is a great place to discuss such issues. Once can join that at http://OracleExadata.org<br /><br />We will be scheduling more such discussions via web based panel...<br />ThanksShyamhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07764639583473068167noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5733464449819279412.post-44323426149460273252009-10-31T18:06:56.201+00:002009-10-31T18:06:56.201+00:00Amin,
In the Exadata demo we did live at OOW, we ...Amin,<br /><br />In the Exadata demo we did live at OOW, we showed Netezza's published figures for disk scan rates (10GB/s) right next to ours (21GB/s). Additionally, we showed Netezza's compression disk scan rates (published at about 25GB/s) against ours (at well over 150GB/s--I'm being conservative). <br /><br />I'm curious where you're getting your "reports"--I suspect it isn't from Oracle, maybe from IBM or Netezza? :) <br /><br />Oh, and I don't think that Oracle Text will work on Netezza's platform at all.<br /><br />You need to make sure you're getting both sides of the story when making an evaluation. Certainly both sides will put their best foot forward and you need to ensure you gather all the information before even considering a decision. If you need more information, I recommend you start with contacting your Oracle Sales rep. If you don't know who that is, 800-ORACLE1 can connect you.Dan Norrishttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09711669745371007306noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5733464449819279412.post-86999689685912988782009-10-31T16:52:35.844+00:002009-10-31T16:52:35.844+00:00Unfortunatley Exadata is far too technical for me....Unfortunatley Exadata is far too technical for me. theer si a demo on youtube http://is.gd/4HKOD but for questions I will ask Dan. But a question for you, who is circulating the reports at your work? A netezza account manager? Someone sounds frightened to try. I would be asking Oracle to do a benchmark test for you, let the results answer your questionDebra Lilleyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06501850988908291461noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5733464449819279412.post-66737463211056510182009-10-31T16:24:55.962+00:002009-10-31T16:24:55.962+00:00So what is the real world comparison between ExaDa...So what is the real world comparison between ExaData and Netezza? The reason I ask is that there are reports circulating at our work place saying that Netezza can run rings around ExaData and that we should stay away from it. Under what conditions will Exadata be a dog? We have Oracle Text features in our application which is also high volume (> 3 million inserts per day) environment and over 500 users doing queries using Oracle Text "contains () > 0 clause.Amin Adatianoreply@blogger.com