In a single step, Oracle becomes the No1 CRM applications company in the world, |
In a single step, Oracle becomes the No1 CRM applications company in the world. |
In a single step, Oracle becomes the number one CRM [customer relationship management] applications company in the world, |
In a single step, Oracle becomes the number one CRM [customer relationship management] applications company in the world. |
In a single step, Oracle becomes the number one CRM applications company in the world, |
In a single step, Oracle becomes the number one CRM applications company in the world, ... Siebel's 4,000 applications customers and 3,400,000 CRM users strengthen our number one position in applications in North America and move us closer to the number one position in applications globally. |
In most companies, one database replaces dozens of Exchange servers, |
In order to grow at this pace, there'll have to be a couple of acquisitions along the way. The tricky thing is to grow at this rate and maintain a 40 percent operating margin. |
In the last few days, Oracle executives have had the opportunity to speak with the holders of a majority of PeopleSoft shares, ... Many of those shareholders indicated the prices at which they would tender their shares. |
It [the offer] is really based on the performance of PeopleSoft in the market, |
It also strengthens our No. 1 positions in the application business in North America. And it moves us closer to our goal of being No. 1 in applications globally. |
It is absolutely true that we set out to expose Microsoft's covert activities, |
It's a nontrivial process to supply certification…. IBM is much better equipped to go through it (than many companies). I'm not sure I can say that for these other databases, |
It's a simple strategy. You take what you can't sell, you glue it into the operating system, and you raise the price of the operating system. |
It's fascinating as we continue to innovate and lead the way in both the application space and the database space. In the very beginning, people said you couldn't make relational databases fast enough to be commercially viable. I thought we could, and we were the first to do it. But we took tremendous abuse until IBM said, "Oh yeah, this stuff is good." |