Customers have hated Oracle for a long time. Never understood why until I worked through the sun acquisition. Nearly every customer I spoke to said their company was pulling their sun kit (we used phones back then not support portals designed to keep them at bay). They already had to deal with big red for db and didn’t want or need to expand that relationship. In many cases that edict came from their top mgmt. That was over a decade ago.
You see, the customers had options. O wasn’t going to continue producing products they liked, such as sun ray and desktops. May as well go to cheap PCs and tablets.And smart phones. They didn’t need million dollar mega servers or 1990s storage tech. Got Dell, etc and Beowulf clusters and this new thing called the cloud. They sure didn’t need support to get any worse than it was.
You see my children, Oracle only really wanted Java so they could litigate their way back to relevance, including completely changing the software engineering landscape to put them back in control. Like they used to be with dbs back in the 90s.
This failed in spectacular fashion with the SCOTUS ruling this week.
Now what? What is Plan B? OCI? Sounds like there is plenty of churn in that space. And a lack of compelling use cases.