At its CloudWorld event, Oracle today announced it will enable IT teams to deploy the same platform it uses to independently deliver cloud services anywhere they see fit.
Leo Leung, vice president of products and strategy for Oracle, said an Oracle Alloy offering will enable organizations to provide a full set of cloud services they can extend and brand as their own. All of the more than 100 infrastructure and platform services that the company makes available on Oracle Cloud can now be deployed anywhere, he said.
In addition, Oracle unfurled a MySQL HeatWave service through which IT teams can access instances of the open source MySQL database running on the Amazon Web Services (AWS) cloud. A similar offering for the Microsoft Azure cloud is also planned.
As part of an ongoing effort to gain share against rival cloud service providers, Oracle has been making a wide range of services available at a lower cost. Oracle Alloy now extends those efforts by making it possible for a wide range of organizations, including traditional enterprise IT organizations and internet service providers, to benefit from the company’s research and development efforts.
Organizations that ally with Oracle can set their own pricing, rate cards, account types and discount schedules and define the support structure and service levels. A preconfigured instance of Oracle Fusion Financials to enable Oracle Alloy partners to manage customer invoicing and billing is also provided.
It’s not clear to what degree these organizations might want to compete with cloud service providers such as Amazon Web Services (AWS), Microsoft and Google, but Oracle Alloy does provide an alternative approach to cloud computing that enables organizations to retain more control over the IT services they provide to others. The challenge, of course, is that acquiring the infrastructure is only one part of the equation. Organizations will also need to hire and retain IT specialists needed to manage cloud platforms on an ongoing basis.
As the volume of applications being deployed in cloud computing environments steadily increases, Oracle clearly views Oracle Alloy as an opportunity to make up for lost ground in a market segment that it initially all but ignored when cloud computing first emerged more than a decade ago. Now, Oracle provides cloud services in 40 commercial and government regions across 22 countries. It has added 10 public cloud regions over the past year and has plans to add six additional commercial regions.
Oracle is betting that, in some cases, partners will opt to deploy some cloud services themselves while relying on Oracle for others depending on the level of demand for specific classes of services. In effect, Oracle is enabling a set of federated cloud services to emerge that are no longer specifically tied to a single provider. It remains to be seen how receptive organizations will be to that approach, but it’s certain that the number of organizations that could afford to deliver cloud services could substantially increase. In theory, at least, increased competition should also lead to lower cloud costs for the organizations that consume those services.