That’s typical of the short-term thinking that dominates their assessments of vendors whose products take many years to get right and live long lives.
Oracle has blown too many chances and at the end of the whole thing is a severely dysfunctional engineering organization where most of the managers are incompetent and have no idea what they are doing. I was there, I know.
Oracle cloud will not be a product that takes "many years to get right". It's already over with right now. The engineering organization that created the mess is not going to suddenly start doing the right things, because the inept, narcissistic, sociopathic idiots that make up the management are capable only of manipulation, dirty tricks and lies.
Someone said TK doesn't take input from beneath him... this is just the tip of the iceberg.... no one I met in the management at Oracle can take input from beneath them. They attack and sabotage anyone speaking the truth or anyone that shows any real competence at the developer level.
Engineering is one large clusterf--k of incompetence and over-blown egos. Managers are never held responsible for anything and are never removed/fired. It will never change.
If by some miracle, over the next few years, Oracle does get the "cloud" together, it will be too late. Customers will have moved to the platforms that are available today and will be extremely reluctant to make changes. Oracle has missed the opportunity to capture cloud customers while they are moving out of on-premise tools. This opportunity will never come again.
As in the SA article, growth occurs on the front end. Once customers have spent the big bucks moving to a cloud architecture, they are not going to want to do that again. This is a one-time opportunity Oracle has missed.
In addition, by the time Oracle spends a few years developing their cloud, the world will have moved on, and features never dreamed of right now will be in existence. It is a losing battle for Oracle, they have missed the one opportunity to cash in on cloud and the future will not get better.
Incompetent engineering coupled with having missed the one-time opportunity to convert customers to cloud will kill the possibility. This is really over with. This year will be quarter after quarter of decline with stock going down the tubes.