EGUIDE:
In this roundup, we recap the top 10 stories in India, including the digitisation work undertaken by global firms in the country, progress made by local enterprises in harnessing technology and how a female coder rose through the ranks in her software development career.
WHITE PAPER:
The market for integrated systems is a key growth area for data center hardware infrastructure. This report sizes the market and profiles early leaders in this important and emerging area.
WHITE PAPER:
Access this in-depth white paper to discover a structured approach to migrating Oracle apps from a physical to a virtual environment. Read on to find out why this approach meets many of the challenges presented by the virtualization of Oracle databases and applications, and learn how you can get started.
EZINE:
In this week's Computer Weekly, we find out why the Met Office turned to an open source database to replace Oracle at the UK weather forecasting service. We take an in-depth look at Microsoft's SQL Server 2014 release. And we analyse the revolutionary potential of cloud computing. Read the issue now.
WHITE PAPER:
View this white paper to learn how Toad™ for Oracle can help you mine your trace files faster and more effectively. Learn why Oracle's native trace file tools are limited, and how Toad can fill in the gaps.
WHITE PAPER:
DBAs cannot afford to rely on reactive measures anymore. They need advanced performance management tools that will enable them to catch emerging issues before they can affect end users. Discover how advanced database management can help DBAs protect the system by preventing problems from developing at all. Download the white paper to learn more.
WHITE PAPER:
This white paper talks about the challenges of migrating from Solaris 10 to Solaris 11 and highlights the benefits of migrating from Solaris to Red Hat Enterprise Linux instead.
EGUIDE:
MySQL, under Oracle's stewardship, has sometimes been viewed with suspicion and seen as an open source icon that has been co-opted. Learn how COO Alexander Culiniac and other experts a reconciling their positive experience with MySQL and the public's doubts about Oracle's intention with the database.