Five Minute Briefing - Oracle
June 4, 2025
Published in conjunction with the Quest Oracle Community (Quest), this bi-weekly publication contains news, market research, and insight for the Oracle ecosystem, as well as Quest news and information. Subscribers also receive Quest ResearchWire, a bi-monthly research report for the Oracle community.
News Flashes
Lyntia Networks, a leading neutral operator in the wholesale telecom sector, announced it is relying on Oracle solutions to help meet its ambitious growth in the highly competitive infrastructure and connectivity markets.
Oracle will spend approximately $40 billion on NVIDIA's higher-performance chips to power OpenAI's new U.S. data center, the Financial Times reported. The data center, situated in Abilene, Texas, is part of the U.S. Stargate Project, led by top AI firms, to boost America's lead in the artificial intelligence industry amid global competition.
New AI-powered anomaly detection and in-memory processing capabilities in the Oracle Utilities Customer Platform are helping deliver fast, accurate meter data management (MDM) and streamlining utility operations. These enhancements simplify work for employees and improve performance across the platform, which powers metering, operations and billing, sales and account management, customer service, and customer engagement in a single solution, said the vendors.
Think About It
As today's database administrators (DBAs) manage the complexity of modern database environments, particularly containerized systems, they must lean into smart automation to transform database management. When DevOps teams and DBAs combine effective automation with Microsoft SQL Server use, it allows organizations to experience better server monitoring and increase server performance while removing common hurdles to software development.
Quest IOUG Database & Technology Community News
Keeping test and development environments current shouldn't drain time or resources. Yet for many Database Administrators (DBAs), cloning and refreshing databases using traditional tools like RMAN and Data Pump can be slow, manual, and disruptive to production systems.
Keeping test and development environments current shouldn't drain time or resources. Yet for many Database Administrators (DBAs), cloning and refreshing databases using traditional tools like RMAN and Data Pump can be slow, manual, and disruptive to production systems.
Quest IOUG Database & Technology Community News
Keeping test and development environments current shouldn't drain time or resources. Yet for many Database Administrators (DBAs), cloning and refreshing databases using traditional tools like RMAN and Data Pump can be slow, manual, and disruptive to production systems.
Keeping test and development environments current shouldn't drain time or resources. Yet for many Database Administrators (DBAs), cloning and refreshing databases using traditional tools like RMAN and Data Pump can be slow, manual, and disruptive to production systems.