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        Microsoft and Oracle Bury Hatchet, Ink Cloud Alliance
        
        
        
			- By Jeffrey Schwartz
 - June 24, 2013
 
		
        
		Longtime rivals Microsoft and Oracle on Monday announced a joint  partnership in which all of Oracle's key software  offerings  will be supported on  Microsoft's Windows Server, Hyper-V and Windows Azure products.
Oracle's wares have previously been supported on Windows Server, but the partnership announced on Monday means the two companies will work together to support Oracle products on Hyper-V and Windows Azure, including  enabling license mobility for Oracle software and the ability to acquire it  from Microsoft via Windows Azure. It also means the two companies are working  together to extend support for Java. 
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer and Server and Tools Business  President Satya Nadella, along with Oracle President Mark Hurd, discussed the  new partnership during a conference call on Monday afternoon. The companies did not  disclose terms of the partnership, which takes effect immediately. 
Ballmer acknowledged a formal partnership was long overdue. "It's  about time and we're really glad we have a chance to work in this much newer  and more constructive way with Oracle," Ballmer said, adding that the  companies' chilly relationship has "evolved" in recent years.
"I think both companies have always -- at least [for] many,  many years -- have had respect for one another and has done the work our customers  wanted us to do, maybe behind the scenes, to get Windows Server and the Oracle  database, application server and the applications to run," Ballmer added. "In  the world of cloud computing, I think that behind-the-scenes collaboration is  not enough. Frankly, the relationships between the two companies have evolved.  Despite the fact we continue to compete, they have evolved in a positive and  constructive manner."
Word of the pact came down Thursday  night during Oracle's earnings call, when CEO Larry Ellison revealed plans  to coop with Microsoft, Salesforce.com and NetSuite in the cloud. Ellison also  alluded to a new database coming from Oracle, called Oracle 12c, with "c"  standing for cloud. Ellison described Oracle 12c as "the most important  technology we've ever developed for this new generation of cloud security."
 There was no mention of Oracle 12c on the call,  but what is effective immediately is support for Oracle databases, middleware and apps on Hyper-V and Windows Azure.  Also effective Monday is the ability for license mobility customers to run Oracle's software on Windows Azure.
In the future, Microsoft will offer a variety of its  software -- including its databases, WebLogic Server and Java -- in the Windows Azure  image gallery. The companies didn't say when the software would be available or  which specific configurations, other than to describe them as popular versions. 
Microsoft also will offer a fully licensed and supported  version of Java in Windows Azure. While Microsoft has touted Windows Azure as  already Java-compatible, Nadella said it was based on the OpenJDK.   
"Now with this, we have the official versions that are  licensed and supported from Oracle directly available as part of their  middleware stack as well as their applications that sit on top of that  middleware stack," Nadella said. "We think this makes Java much more  first-class with Oracle support on Windows Azure."
Also Oracle will offer Oracle Linux, with unspecified  software as preconfigured instances on Windows Azure.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Jeffrey Schwartz is editor of Redmond magazine and also covers cloud computing for Virtualization Review's Cloud Report. In addition, he writes the Channeling the Cloud column for Redmond Channel Partner. Follow him on Twitter @JeffreySchwartz.