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Oracle Clase 01

Oracle has grown from one of the first commercially available relational databases in 1979 to the dominant database provider today. Key releases included Oracle8i in 1999 which added Internet capabilities, Oracle9i in 2001 which introduced Real Application Clusters and data warehousing features, and Oracle Database 10g in 2003 which enabled grid computing and self-managing features. The document outlines Oracle's history from 1979 to 2003, highlighting major product releases that expanded its capabilities.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
22 views22 pages

Oracle Clase 01

Oracle has grown from one of the first commercially available relational databases in 1979 to the dominant database provider today. Key releases included Oracle8i in 1999 which added Internet capabilities, Oracle9i in 2001 which introduced Real Application Clusters and data warehousing features, and Oracle Database 10g in 2003 which enabled grid computing and self-managing features. The document outlines Oracle's history from 1979 to 2003, highlighting major product releases that expanded its capabilities.

Uploaded by

anon_202184032
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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History of Oracle

Oracle has grown from its humble beginnings as one of a

number of databases available in the 1970s to the market leader of today. Oracle8i
Oracle8i, released in 1999, added a new twist to the Oracle

database - a combination of enhancements that made the Oracle8i database the focal point of the world of Internet (the i in 8i) computing.

History of Oracle
Oracle9i
Oracle9i, released in 2001, introduced Real Application

Clusters as a replacement for Oracle Parallel Server, and added many management and data warehousing features.

Oracle Database 10g


Released in 2003 and the current release, enables grid (the g

in 10g) computing. A grid is simply a pool of computers that provides needed resources for applications on an as-needed basis. The goal is to provide computing resources that transparently scale to the user community. 10g further reduces the time, cost, and complexity of database management through the introduction of self-managing features such as the Automated Database Diagnostic Monitor,

History of Oracle
1979 - Oracle Release 2 the first commercially available

relational database to use SQL. 1983 - Single code base for Oracle across multiple platforms 1984 - Portable toolset 1986 - Client/server Oracle relational database. 1987 - CASE and 4GL toolset 1988 - Oracle Financial Applications built on relational database

History of Oracle
1989 - Oracle6 1991 - Oracle Parallel Server on massively parallel

platforms 1993 - Oracle7 with cost-based optimizer 1994 - Oracle Version 7.1 generally available: parallel operations including query, load, and create index 1996 - Universal database with extended SQL via cartridges, thin client, and application server

History of Oracle
1997 - Oracle8 generally available: including objectrelational and Very Large Database (VLDB) features 1999 - Oracle8i generally available: Java Virtual Machine (JVM) in the database 2000 - Oracle9i Application Server generally available:

Oracle tools integrated in middle tier 2001 - Oracle9i Database Server generally available: Real Application Clusters; OLAP and data mining API in the database 2003 - Oracle Database 10g enables grid computing and simplifies and automates key management tasks

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