Saturday, March 24, 2007

Oracle’s History

1977
Relational Software Inc. (RSI - currently Oracle Corporation) established
1978
Oracle V1 ran on PDP-11 under RSX, 128 KB max memory. Written in assembly language. Implementation separated Oracle code and user code. Oracle V1 was never officially released.
1980
Oracle V2 released - the first commercially available relational database to use SQL. Oracle runs on on DEC PDP-11 machines. Coide is still written in PDP-11 assembly language, but now ran under Vax/VMS.
1982
Oracle V3 released, Oracle became the first DBMS to run on mainframes, minicomputers, and PC’s (portable codebase).First release to employ transactional processing.Oracle V3’s server code was written in C.
1983
Relational Software Inc. changed its name to Oracle Corporation.
1984
Oracle V4 released, introduced read consistency, was ported to multiple platforms, first interoperability between PC and server.
1986
Oracle V5 released. Featured true client/server, VAX-cluster support, and distributed queries. (first DBMS with distributed capabilities).
1987
CASE and 4GL toolset
1988
Oracle V6 released - PL/SQL introduced.Oracle Financial Applications built on relational database.
1989
Released Oracle 6.2 with Symmetric cluster access using the Oracle Parallel Server
1991
Reached power of 1,000 TPS on a parallel computing machine.First database to run on a massively parallel computer (Oracle Parallel Server).
1992
Released Oracle7 for Unix
1993
Rollout of Oracle’s Cooperative Development Environment (CDE).Introduction of Oracle Industries and the Oracle Media Server.
1994
Oracle’s headquarters moved to present location.Released Oracle 7.1 and Oracle7 for the PC.
1995
Reported gross revenues of almost $3 billion.
1995
OraFAQ.com website launched.
1997
Oracle8 released (supports more users, more data, higher availability, and object-relational features)
1998
Oracle announces support for the Intel Linux operating system
1999
Oracle8i (the “i” is for internet) or Oracle 8.1.5 with Java integration (JVM in the database)
2000
Oracle8i Release 2 releasedOracle now not only the number one in Databases but also in ERP ApplicationsOracle9i Application Server generally available: Oracle tools integrated in middle tier
2001
Oracle9i Release 1 (with RAC and Advanced Analytic Service)
2002
Oracle9i Release 2
2004
Oracle10g Release 1 (10.1.0) available (”g” is for grid, the latest buzzword)
2005
The Oracle FAQ (this site) is 10 years old!Oracle10g Release 2 (10.2.0) available
Oracle release a free version of their database, Oracle XE (Express Edition)

ref: http://orafaq.com/faq/what_is_oracles_history

1 comments:

And the latest Oracle is now available for the VMS operating system (now known as OpenVMS) for both Alpha and Itanium platforms.

And the latest version of Oracle RDB (which is a separate product) is also available for VAX, Alpha, and Itanium under VMS.