Market-leading growth rate, compared with the decline in AWS’ growth, raises the specter of Oracle overtaking Amazon in the Cloud Wars Top 10.
Search Results: Oracle CLoud (1932)
Bob revisits the Cloud Wars Top 10 rankings as the latest growth rates of Oracle might move it up the ranks past Amazon’s AWS.
With its EU Sovereign Cloud, Oracle aims to address common risks associated with data residency, privacy, and management.
As a result of its surge in cloud revenue and impressive growth rates, Bob Evans suggests that Oracle has joined Microsoft, AWS, and Google Cloud as the fourth hyperscaler.
Bob Evans shares five key reasons that influenced Oracle’s surge in cloud growth in its most recent quarter.
Staying on track as the world’s hottest cloud provider, Oracle crushed Q4 with a 54% growth rate and quarterly cloud revenue of $4.4 billion.
Financial services giant Deutsche Bank is leveraging the power of multi-cloud by working with both Google Cloud and Oracle.
In the midst of its digital transformation, Deutsche Bank is leveraging the capabilities of both Oracle and Google Cloud.
Oracle continues to be the world’s fastest-growing major cloud provider by a wide margin as its 45% cloud-growth rate put it well ahead of its two closest competitors.
With the Q1 earnings for the Cloud Wars Top 10 companies available, Bob Evans reviews the results to determine who the hottest cloud vendors are.
Oracle CEO Larry Ellison announced the company’s plans to build hundreds of data centers (one in every country) at the Oracle Database Summit.
Larry Ellison commented on a few topics as he made a surprise Zoom appearance at the Oracle Analyst Summit last month.
Bob Evans offers cloud growth guidance for several of the Cloud Wars Top 10 companies, with Oracle, ServiceNow, and SAP being “most bullish.”
Oracle’s CEO Safra Catz suggests that Oracle’s booming cloud business will grow 50% in the next quarter, after seeing 45% growth in Q3.
Oracle CEO Safra Catz projects 50% growth in cloud revenue in the next quarter, enabling the company to continue down the path of being the fastest-growing cloud provider.
Oracle’s cloud revenue for Q3 grew by 45%, making it the only company in the Cloud Wars Top 10 to achieve that upward trajectory during economic uncertainty.
Oracle, SAP, and Google Cloud are the fastest-growing major cloud vendors in the world, explains Bob Evans, who reports Q4 earnings for the Top 10 companies.
Oracle, SAP, and Google Cloud have proven to be the fastest-growing major cloud providers in the world, explains Bob Evans in reviewing Q4 results.
Bob Evans reviews the remaining performance obligation (RPO) metrics for enterprise app — and Cloud Wars Top 10 — vendors Oracle, SAP, Salesforce, and ServiceNow.
Uber’s deals with Oracle and Google Cloud are a bellwether, signaling that many companies will end up embracing multi-cloud rather than having their own data centers.