Oracle to Buy Hyperion for $3.3 Billion 52
Oolala submitted an article that opens: "Business software maker Oracle Corp. will buy Hyperion Solutions Corp. for $3.3 billion in cash, renewing a shopping spree aimed at toppling rival SAP AG.
The deal announced Thursday will give Oracle an arsenal of Hyperion products that are widely used by SAP's customers. Hyperion's tools, known as "business intelligence" software, help chief financial officers and other top corporate executives track their company's performance."
in cash? (Score:4, Funny)
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And that's how you do high-level business. Or so I hear.
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Tracker. (Score:1, Informative)
That use to be called...the stock market.
Buzzword alert (Score:1, Insightful)
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Just for interest's sake, analysis means to take apart, while synthesis means to bring together, I think.
Re:Buzzword alert (Score:5, Informative)
To give more context, Hyperion (or, more accurately, a company Hyperion bought a while back) basically invented OLAP with Essbase. This is a hugely important deal in enterprise software. Lots of companies use Oracle for their transactional data (i.e. sales data, purchasing data, etc), to support huge data volumes, but Oracle's homegrown OLAP products to analyze this data are generally poorly received in the marketplace. Hyperion is one of the standard bearers of this type of software.
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a company Hyperion bought a while back
Arbor Software
Actually, it's more accurate to say a relational database is like an excel spreadsheet and "business intelligence" (which really means OLAP, on-line analytical processing) software is like pivot tables.
The term OLAP is not the most technically accurate. Basically, OnLine Analytical Processing is a method that accountants can use to explore ways to better maximize profits or minimize costs within a corporation. Arbor Software realized that the multi-dimensional database technology being researched in various universities at the time would be an effective tool for OLAP.
In a relational database, there are many tables but they are all two dimensional. In a multi-dimensional database,
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Turnabout (Score:3, Insightful)
Think of the beetles! (Score:1)
Nasty! (Score:4, Insightful)
It's interesting that the arena that these guys play in is so small, yet worth so much money.
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Honestly...please, I want to know!
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Crystal Reports is a tool commonly used to enhance the reporting capabilities of Microsoft Visual Studio. The case here is Oracle buying up the manufacturer of tools which are used to enhance their competitor's product, and I suppose Apple buying Crystal Reports would be a similar case if you consider Apple's dev tools as competitors to Microsoft's. I'm not sure I do, though.
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Sorry, I can't work out if that is sarcasm, or if you own stock in Crystal Reports?
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I remember Hyperion (Score:1)
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It's way too much even for this yacht. [royalhuisman.com]
Incidentally, this yacht was built for Jim Clark, [wikipedia.org] the founder of Silicon Graphics and Netscape, and featured the first carbon fiber mast and computerised sail system. I'm not a sailing geek, but I want to be!
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Don't forget the Microsoft factor (Score:3, Informative)
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Actually, it's even weirder. Hyperion recently announced a partnership with Microsoft. Wonder what acquisition by a mortal blood enemy is going to do to that deal?
And this does hurt Microsoft. Their attempt at OLAP - after years of development, tractor trailers of cash, and free distribution - still sucks. As in two orders of magnitude slower than Essbase. Not to mention zero (OK, I exaggerate, pr
Tales from beyond the taxi ride. (Score:2, Interesting)
What for? (Score:5, Funny)
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Consolidation may not work well (Score:3, Insightful)
However the Hyperion suite is very much end of the food chain, after the fact. It relies on other operational/transactional systems to produce the data. Thus its independence was an advantage. Its ETL is somewhat weak & support patchy so possibly Oracle can help there. However Oracle are a direct competitor to the other operational/transactional systems (e.. Teradata,IBM, SAP etc)
Oh, good! (Score:1)
SAP bought Pilot Software (Score:1)
SQR gets bought again (Score:2)
I don't HOW many corporate changes that product has been through. For the ignorant, SQR is a report/programming language used by PeopleSoft and others to write programs and generate reports from databases. I got some experience using it at City College of San Francisco with Oracle databases and the SCT Banner college information system.
It's a niche product and basically an obsolete language, having not really been significantly enhanced in some time on Hyperion's watch.
It's been around for years and been th