
Oracle now have the main players lined up as far as their multicloud aspirations go. Here are the announcements for the main players.
- Microsoft and Oracle Expand Partnership to Deliver Oracle Database Services on Oracle Cloud Infrastructure in Microsoft Azure (2023-09-14)
- Oracle and Google Cloud Announce a Groundbreaking Multicloud Partnership (2024-06-11)
- Oracle and Amazon Web Services Announce Strategic Partnership (2024-09-09)
The original Azure interconnect announcement was in 2019 (here), but the expansion of their partnership is probably a bigger deal.
Choice is good
From my perspective this is cool because it gives customers choice. The choice of a cloud provider is driven by many factors, not all of which are about what’s best for the database. The fact that Oracle customers can potentially run their Exadata and/or Autonomous Database services from inside the big three cloud providers is a win. It should give a more consistent experience for the users, and will reduce the latency issues of traditional multicloud.
Pricing
This is a mixed bag really. The announcement at CloudWorld 2024 included the comment that Exadata in AWS would be the same cost as Exadata in Oracle Cloud. I assume that is also true for Azure and GCP. That’s good to know.
These deals do not affect the cloud pricing models for Oracle databases that aren’t Exadata or Autonomous Database. Notice the cloud licensing policy remains the same.
It would be great if licensing became consistent between on-prem and all supported cloud providers, like it was in the good old days (pre 23-Jan-2017).
Availability
I think this is going to be the biggest issue around these agreements. If it is not available in the region you need it to be, then it doesn’t exist. Even in the keynote there was a moment where Larry Ellison said the first rollout would be Virginia, and the other guy on the stage (a customer) said he needed it in 30+ locations.
Time will tell how well these rollouts proceed, and how well integrated the solutions are.
Other Oracle database services
From what I can see the agreements focus on Oracle Autonomous Database and Oracle Exadata Database Service. If you require something that isn’t one of these, then you are back to using existing services offered by the cloud provider (like RDS for Oracle), or doing it for yourself.
Hopefully you can transition to Autonomous Database, but I know of several 3rd party products we use that will not play well with that (at the moment).
Overall
This seems like good business. Some would say it’s a long time coming. We will have to wait and see how the rollout and integration goes before we can judge if this is a success.
Cheers
Tim…
PS. Still no on-prem 23ai if you are not running on engineered systems.


The title of this post is taken from tweet I saw a few weeks ago and it keeps coming back to haunt me, so I thought I would comment on it.