At 01:33 PM 4/25/01 -0800, you wrote:
>As for DB2, it has a few issues where if you
>try and do certain things you really do end up very close to an Oracle
>price.  
>

[ahem] Apologies Kimberly, but this sounds very much like an apologist
stance. At the end of your posting, you are saying "you shouldn't be
concerned that DB2 is tons cheaper than Oracle because in some cases it
isn't". Well, maybe, but so what? If you do a business analysis, and they
come out close in price (I could do one right now where Oracle would come
out cheaper), then buy Oracle. If the reverse, buy DB2. If Oracle is the
incumbent, then retraining costs etc become a cost factor. If you're just
starting out, then costs may be the primary or *only* factor.

I think this is a case of the market voting with its wallet. That's how
things are *supposed* to work.


Dennis Taylor
--------------------------------
COMPUTER SCIENCE:

        A study akin to numerology and astrology, but lacking
        the precision of the former, and the success of the latter.

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Author: Dennis Taylor
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