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11/19/2007
This year's Oracle OpenWorld user conference, which wrapped up Nov. 15 in San Francisco, drew an estimated 43,000 attendees for five days of keynotes, technical sessions, vendor exhibits and rock 'n' roll.
Pop singer Billy Joel introduced Oracle CEO Larry Ellison Wednesday, who gave the conference wind-down keynote.
"Do you want me to sing while you play piano?" Ellison quipped as the singer walked off stage. Joel was scheduled to perform for attendees at an OpenWorld concert/party later that night at the Cow Palace, along with Lenny Kravits, Stevie Nicks, and Mick Fleetwood.

Larry Ellison (Photo by Mary Grush)
Linux Happenings
Speaking to a standing-room-only crowd, Ellison noted that it has been one year since Oracle began offering its own Linux distro. Dubbed "Unbreakable Linux," the open source operating system is based on former partner Red Hat's version.
"We start with Red Hat and fix bugs," Ellison said. Oracle literature notes that more than 1,500 companies have signed up for its Linux discount support program. Oracle's diverse list of new Linux customers includes, among others, Dell, Yahoo, Mitsubishi, IHOP, Timex, the City of Las Vegas, and Stanford University.
But Ellison had a bigger market differentiator to unveil: The year-old Linux distro will now ship with his company's new virtualization product, the Oracle VM.
"This is not the same code as Red Hat," Ellison said. He noted that his announcement was the third time that Oracle VM had been announced at the show.
Oracle Fusion
Ellison also gave his audience a "Fusion update," promising attendees that they would see applications based on Oracle Fusion Middleware in the first half of next year. Oracle's Fusion stack currently bundles a dozen tools and technologies -- everything from an app server to business process analysis tools, an SOA suite to data integration developer tools.
"People ask me, what's a Fusion application anyway," Ellison said. "A Fusion application is built on our industry standard middleware…with a service-oriented architecture. That's the primary characteristic of a Fusion application."
Starting next year, virtually all of the company's new applications will be Fusion applications, Ellison said.
At the end of his presentation, Ellison took questions from the audience for nearly 30 minutes. He fielded questions about his company's acquisition strategy, its competitors and the price of the Fusion Middleware bundle. In answer to a question about who he saw as his company's greatest competitor, Ellison named SAP and "clever startup in the software-as-a-service" business.
Virtualization
Earlier in the week, Oracle President Charles Phillips did the actual unveiling of the Oracle VM during his conference keynote.
The College of Southern Nevada (CSN), a community college in Las Vegas with 41,000 students, has adopted the Angel Learning Management Suite (LMS) to support its online course offerings. In Spring 2008 CSN began evaluating alternatives to WebCT, which it currently runs, and made the decision to adopt Angel in the fall. In January 2009, CSN's 865 sections of online enrollment will be delivered using the Angel LMS.
Toshiba has introduced a new USB docking station that incorporates DisplayLink--a technology that allows computers to connect to projectors and other types of displays through USB 2.0.
Mitsubishi has begun shipping a new LCD-based SXGA+ projector aimed at higher education, specifically medical schools. The new MH2850U, according to Mitsubishi, is "specially engineered for projecting DICOM simulation images for use in medical education and training."
Last month, ActiveState released Komodo IDE 5.0, the company's latest integrated development environment (IDE). Komodo supports multiple programming and markup languages, including HTML, JavaScript, PHP, Perl, Java, Python, C++ and more. It does not support some .NET languages at present, such as ASP/ASP.NET, C# and VB.NET.
IBM last week announced consulting services specifically designed to help organizations assess their options in using cloud computing technology. "Cloud computing" is a much argued term, but it typically refers to solutions delivered over the Internet, rather than via customer premises-installed software.
Hollins University, among other higher ed institutions in Virginia, has implemented Omnilert's e2Campus emergency notification system (ENS) just ahead of a state-mandated deadline requiring them at every public institution of higher education by Jan. 1. Hollins itself isn't a public campus, but wished to implement an ENS before the end of the year, the school said in a company statement.