Oracle, partners boost grid computing
January 9, 2004 | 12:00am
Oracle Corp., the worlds largest enterprise software company, said it is working closely with its leading partners like Computer Associates, Digex, F5, HP, Micro-muse, Sun Microsystems and TUSC to develop integration points that will reduce the management complexities of enterprise grid computing and other multi-vendor technology environments.
Oracle is working with these partners to develop integration points to Oracle Enterprise Ma-nager 10g Grid Control (Grid Control), the management software used to manage Oracles new grid computing infrastructure software.
Industry standardization of grid computing will create a simplified, efficient and cost-effective way to manage hundreds of servers from a centralized point.
Oracle Grid Control will significantly improve the automation of managing Oracle technology and the end-to-end application infrastructure.
"Open and standard application protocol interfaces will enable partners to easily integrate with the automated management capa-bilities of Oracle grid computing infrastructure to ensure in-depth monitoring and administration of the enterprise system as a whole," said Jay Rossiter, Oracles vice president for system management product development.
Oracle is working with these partners to develop integration points to Oracle Enterprise Ma-nager 10g Grid Control (Grid Control), the management software used to manage Oracles new grid computing infrastructure software.
Industry standardization of grid computing will create a simplified, efficient and cost-effective way to manage hundreds of servers from a centralized point.
Oracle Grid Control will significantly improve the automation of managing Oracle technology and the end-to-end application infrastructure.
"Open and standard application protocol interfaces will enable partners to easily integrate with the automated management capa-bilities of Oracle grid computing infrastructure to ensure in-depth monitoring and administration of the enterprise system as a whole," said Jay Rossiter, Oracles vice president for system management product development.
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