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Oracle CEO reassures customers over Siebel
At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison delivered his first keynote since Oracle's move to buy Siebel. He tried to allay concerns that the planned takeover could eliminate Siebel on Demand and delay the release of Project Fusion, which will combine acquired products with Oracle's own applications.
Sun, Oracle team on low-cost computing
At a press conference in San Francisco, Sun's Scott McNealy and Oracle's Larry Ellison talk about their plans to bundle database software from Oracle on low-end servers from Sun.
Sun and Oracle talk SCO, Unix licensing
At a press conference in San Francisco, Sun's Scott McNealy and Oracle's Larry Ellison discuss Microsoft's plans to license Unix technology from SCO Group.
Oracle CEO banters with OpenWorld attendees
At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco, Oracle CEO Larry Ellison answers questions from attendees about a wide range of topics, such as virtualization, competition in the applications market, and his early years working at Oracle.
Ellison reflects on Oracle history
At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco, CEO Larry Ellison shares his insights into the company's 30-year history, including its contract with the CIA to build the first commercial relational database.
Attention Linux users: You now have Oracle support
From Oracle OpenWorld 2006: CEO Larry Ellison announced Wednesday that Oracle will now support Red Hat Linux at much lower rates than Red Hat offers right now. Is that frightened penguin scared of Ellison?
A cry to make another contact with God. Shot in Las Vegas, NV by Tony Mendoza, from Downright Digital Productions
At Oracle's headquarters in Redwood Shores, Calif., Ellison presents the company's software support and development plans for PeopleSoft, JD Edwards and Oracle customers in the wake of the merger.
Oracle president: 'Protect, extend and evolve.'
At Oracle OpenWorld in San Francisco, Oracle President Charles Phillips explains how the company plans to innovate and extend applications while protecting customers' existing investments.
Your very own video game oracle
CNET's Neha Tiwari explores Microsoft Game Advisor, a Web site that provides free system scans. It also informs you whether your computer can handle the hottest games. A time-saver and a money-saver worth checking out! For more information and a link to the site, read this blog.