Oracle Database as a Service Room for Improvement

BaidyTHIONGANE - PeerSpot reviewer
Engineer at BNP Paribas

The solution's pricing could be less expensive. 

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Hamid M. Hamid - PeerSpot reviewer
Data architect at Banking Sector

Oracle Database as a Service is a tool that serves as a benchmark when compared to other databases in the market, so I can't find any shortcomings where improvements are required.

The price of the solution is an area of concern. From an improvement perspective, the price of the solution should be lowered.

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Vipul Saxena - PeerSpot reviewer
Manager (QA) at PureSoftware Ltd

One area for improvement would be the ability to connect to Excel directly from the database. Currently, I am unable to do this with Oracle Database as a Service, whereas I am able to do so with SQL Server. I would like to see Oracle Database as a Service offer a similar service to what SQL Server provides in terms of connecting Excel to the database. 

In the next release, I would like to see a feature that allows for easy transfer of data from MySQL to other databases, such as SQL Server. Having this capability would provide developers with more flexibility in their coding.

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Buyer's Guide
Oracle Database as a Service
April 2024
Learn what your peers think about Oracle Database as a Service. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: April 2024.
768,578 professionals have used our research since 2012.
WilmerRodriguez - PeerSpot reviewer
Account Manager at BGH

The solution needs more certifications for other products and applications because migration to the cloud is difficult without them.

The solution currently uses GoldenGate for disaster recovery plans and I'd like the option for a different database such as SQL Server, MySQL, or MariaDB. 

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OM
Cloud Expert | DevOps | Oracle Consultant at confidential

The direct scaling is a feature that has room for improvement. I would like to see virtual management machines that can scale storage well with zero downtime. The backup option and patching would then be much easier to do.

I would also like to implement CDI with Database as a Service.

There is also room for improvement with regards to scalability and availability. The maintenance is also an issue. When Oracle does maintenance, you need to be prepared because everything will be down.

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Goce Starkovski - PeerSpot reviewer
Head Of Infrastructure Group in ICT Department at EVN Macedonia/EVN AG

The installation process requires improvement as it can be quite complex. Simplifying the procedure would certainly be beneficial. There is room for enhancing the administration tools, possibly by providing better separation of functions.

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Roberto Huaman - PeerSpot reviewer
Head of Data Architecture and Analytics Solutions at America Movil Peru SAC

It's a very expensive product. So, the pricing needs to be improved.

Big data use cases involving analytics, especially advanced analytics like machine learning, I need to improve in Oracle.


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RB
Consultant sous-contractant at Québec Government

Oracle Database as a Service's initial setup was very complex.

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Raghuraman Sundararajan - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Manager III at a financial services firm with 10,001+ employees

The solution provides the same type of RDBMS engine for all use cases. They need to provide different products that will be suitable for all use cases. The solution does not support the documentation of databases.

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Daniel_Nemethy - PeerSpot reviewer
Owner at Nemethy Moderato Kft

I would like to improve the stability of the Oracle database.

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Jahnavi Koppala - PeerSpot reviewer
Actimize Developer at Infosys

Oracle Database as a Service is very convenient to use. However, we need to know to which schema we want it to connect specifically, and what are the username and password. The solution requires some basic knowledge of SQL RP and SQL Oracle to use it.

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Robin Saikat Chatterjee - PeerSpot reviewer
Head of Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Solutioning Technology and Architeture at Tata Consultancy Services

Currently, there is no simple method to modify the orchestrations on which the compute hosts are based. Hence, unlike the IaaS Oracle services, in cases where there is a need to make certain changes to the service, such as adding an IP network or a GRE tunnel, it requires specialized skills from the backend. However, we expect with the rapid pace of innovation that the feature to modify advanced aspects might be added on the fly in later versions.

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Guruprasad Gonjare - PeerSpot reviewer
Director Cloud Architecture at LTIMINDTREE

I would like to see improvements in the license cost. The solution is subscription-based for PaaS services. You need to buy your own authorized license.

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Ahmad Hida - PeerSpot reviewer
Application and BI manager at Ithmaar-solutions

The price of Oracle Database as a Service could be better.

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Adnan Kamarudin - PeerSpot reviewer
Database Engineer at HeiTech Padu Berhad

In terms of improvements, I believe Oracle Database is already quite robust, but application development could be enhanced to fully utilize its features.

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ARIEL MUNAFO - PeerSpot reviewer
Co-Founder & CEO at CLOUDEX

The solution’s pricing could be improved.

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CS
Consultant at Freelance

They should add more integration to the solution.

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MM
Technology Director at 24i

The solution is very expensive. 

We'd like to see better support for non-structured data and in-memory load. That would help with applications we need to cache. 

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Csaba Molnar - PeerSpot reviewer
IT department manager at Szrt

I would like the tool to improve the setup because it is complex.

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Azhar Azhar - PeerSpot reviewer
BI consultant at RajhiSteel

Pricing for Oracle Database as a Service could be cheaper, so this is an area for improvement.

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PC
Independent Consultant at Unaikui

The product is very expensive.

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SW
Founder at Simpro Tech

There is room for improvement in the speed of the data migration process.

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ET
Enterprise Solutions Consultant at a computer software company with 201-500 employees

I'm a rookie at the moment. I still need to learn the solution. It's hard to discuss what is needed when you are still learning. 

For many companies, the standard version is not enough. They need to move to the enterprise version. However, there is a large price jump between the two. 

A company needs to have skilled people on its team in order to really take advantage of the solution. 

I'm not sure about the ADF lifecycle. 

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Parker Chung - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Director at Stark Technology Inc.

Oracle Database as a Service could improve the performance when monitoring.

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YA
IT Project Manager at Awash International Bank

The solution can be improved by reducing the pricing, making the deployment less complex, and increasing security.

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GauravBatra - PeerSpot reviewer
Managing Solution Architect at Cegal

In such a heavy product, there's always some level of improvement needed. 

On the cloud services, they need to improve some console-level items, including the logging of the databases on the console level.

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RB
Development Manager at Telcel

Performance always is an important issue. The product must improve its performance.

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Guillermo Peña - PeerSpot reviewer
Software and Integration Architect at Unicomer

Although we do not need to set up our own indexes, because the solution internally improves the queries, when we migrate to a different instance, the internal machine learning is lost. The solution doesn't provide an option for migrating the index optimization to another instance.

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OT
Database Administrator at Contemi

Improvement in Oracle DBaaS could focus on enhancing performance monitoring and reporting tools. A more streamlined utility tool would be beneficial, reducing the need for manual intervention in addressing potential slow activities on the database. It could be able to notify the management team quickly.

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AANKITGUPTAA - PeerSpot reviewer
Consultant at Pi DATACENTERS

It doesn't have an in-built database load balancer, like a database proxy and a database firewall. It should provide this feature also, the database load balancing.

The deployment is complex. 

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ES
Manager at NAVER Corp

The solution’s price could be reduced.

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JY
Software Architecture Lead at SoftwareONE

The initial setup could improve.

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HC
Director & Chief Executive at The Bank of East Asia, Limited

Oracle DBaaS could be compatible with more platforms. 

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DZ
Cloud Engineer/ Data Architect at a government with 201-500 employees

Oracle Database as a Service is a good product but costly. The licensing costs for it should be reduced because it's expensive. The license fee for Oracle Database is more costly than my product license.

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Md.  Kamruzzaman - PeerSpot reviewer
It Officer at Ziska

The stability of the product can be improved.

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Brian Imambaks - PeerSpot reviewer
Founder at Technovate

The area in this solution that could be improved is that currently, it's difficult to do the setup. You need to do all kinds of command lines to get it set up. If that setup becomes easier and easily manageable, that would be great.

In the next release, I'd like to see a simpler connection between Oracle and other databases like SQL, MySQL, or a DB tool. I'd also like to see a simpler way to pull data from those external databases. This would add value to Oracle in my opinion.

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Ayman Sayed - PeerSpot reviewer
Manager at Mirsani Pharma Co.

Debugging this solution is challenging. 

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Uriel Juárez - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Consultant at Sygno IT Services

Oracle Database as a Service could improve by having ETL for larger data.

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SS
Computer Engineer at NITC: IT Agency of Government of Nepal

The tool needs to improve its pricing and stability. 

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Lakshmi Narasimha Reddy Singam - PeerSpot reviewer
Associate Technical Delivery Manager at Accolite

The performance needs improvement.

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MA
Senior Database Administrator at BCIE

I have had a hard time finding some documentation. There should provide easier accessible documentation for Oracle Database as a Service.

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SA
Sr. Curiculum Developer at o9solutions.com

Earlier, the interface was continuously changing. Features you used would be moved somewhere else, so it was a little challenging to navigate, but now I think it's stable. 

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AA
IT Program Manager at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees

I don't believe that any product is a perfect solution. I believe that each product has some minor disadvantage about which customers need to be able ready to work with or workaround. It may not be the fault of the product but lack of compatibility, the preferences of the user or lack of knowledge of existing features. I think these can all be the case in not maximizing what Oracle already has.

Because of my preference for and knowledge of Toad and the way I work with Oracle, I am not up to date on all of the tools included in this product. But I think if we have all of the features needed as developers already in the product, Oracle will be much better. For example, something very important for all developers that could already be available now in Oracle products is weighting the data. This is a very important technical concern for data centers.

The code that developers use is built up in some instructions, so I need to understand how each instruction is executed and how the current state of the code or data application is affecting the transactions. I found that this type of analysis was difficult in Oracle itself, so I used another product — like Toad — that would give me the ability to debug all the code instruction by instruction to really understand what is going on. It's quite an important feature. If it is available in Oracle now it is not very good or well described. This is a problem that needs a solution.

If it is already there and the vendor does not know about it or understand it, I think there is a big issue. The difference is that to get the most out of the technology, the developers really need to know about the new features and how to find and use them. This is something about Oracle that I think is not very good.

Along with that idea, I think that Oracle might do a little bit improve their interface as it is not very user-friendly and I have heard other developers say similar things. I didn't use myself because it would not help me as much or as quickly as other products to develop functions and to develop other features like reporting. I would have to learn a whole different way.

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SK
Technical Consultant at a computer software company with 51-200 employees

Nowadays, scaling is very easy with AWS, Postgres, or MySQL solutions. Also, AWS takes care of a few things. However, we need to do everything manually in Oracle. It would be better if we could have a little bit of automation or a chance for autoscaling with Oracle Database as a Service.

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RN
Chief Innovation Officer at Viscosity North America

Features that people want the most are already there. One of them is Oracle In-Memory which allows you to put things in a columnar data store in memory with Oracle's 12c (12.1.0.2+). You could have an in-memory database. You could have columnar data, which is compressed and in-memory (in the in-memory column store) or if you're doing transactional data, it's in the buffer cache (memory) so it's very fast to do that transactions. It's a different memory area altogether. When I look at the cloud, you'll need In-Memory more, because you're going to be dealing with larger volumes of data. The second feature that helps is multi-tenancy; Oracle already has this as of 12c Release 1. It is the ability to clone and move things around and maybe do an exchange partition (PDB - Pluggable Database) with one of your vendors or one of your customers out there (given security needs are met). Non-PDBs (or not using multi-tenancy is being deprecated).  Leveraging and testing new features of 12.2 is also beneficial.  Oracle 18c will be beneficial with Snapshot Carousel, PDB switchover,  In-Memory External Tables and Polymorphic Tables.

I think the way that Oracle and other vendors can move people quicker to the cloud is by educating people on the capabilities of the cloud and some of the benefits of the cloud. I think as customers and vendors out there and partners of Oracle look at providing solutions for the cloud, I think people will be more likely to go there, but what I think right now is the biggest hesitancy is there are a lot of other cloud providers don't have any of the features Oracle has. Oracle must let people know that if you have on-site Exadata, now you can have Exadata in the cloud. Easy to move. You've got a lot of data you want to archive? You can move it to a slower, larger server or a faster, smaller server depending on what you want to do. Just the capabilities that they have in-house or in the cloud. Some cost more than others, so effective planning is one big key to success. The cloud is gaining momentum, but the key to success is evaluating it fully and using appropriately.

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Makrand Tare - PeerSpot reviewer
Enterprise architect at Tech Mahindra Limited

Oracle Database as a Service could improve by reducing the price.

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MS
Senior BackEnd .net at a wholesaler/distributor with 1,001-5,000 employees

No company is perfect, but Oracle does need to improve their support. They need to really focus on the customer experience, et cetera. 

I would also like to see them improve the Oracle Database Interface for distributor businesses.

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ST
CEO at QUERIX (UK) LIMITED

The improvements we require are mostly regarding the documentation and compatibility with other systems or with other non-Oracle technologies. 

Documentation is difficult to find. Since we're experienced with Oracle technology, we have also found many errors in it. Not everything is 100% accurate.

The solution should add functionalities, like database system functions, to speed up the query processing type. Any sort of functions or commands that would give you a faster result would be a welcome improvement. Microsoft Azure, for example, has some building functionalities to fetch big chunks of data and in a very fast way. I haven't seen a similar feature from Oracle. 

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it_user452346 - PeerSpot reviewer
IT Manager with 501-1,000 employees

So we want to see, obviously, besides Oracle databases, what other databases can be provisioned and integrated in the cloud. So if I have to have an application running off of a non-Oracle database, and I have an application and the database running in cloud, which is an Oracle, I want to see if I can integrate them through what kind of a web service, how can I transfer the data? How do I move my processes without having to come back into my on prem and then go back into the secondary cloud? So those are some of the integration points I'm looking at.

And the second important thing I'm looking at is, the overall governance. How Oracle can provide their cloud control and give use the ability to manage the on prem and the off prem cloud services, combined in a single view.

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KopanoRamaphoi - PeerSpot reviewer
Consultant at Rpc Data

We've been very happy with the solution. I can't recall any missing features. It works well once it is installed correctly. If you install it incorrectly in your environment, you may run into issues.

One of the things that I have noticed is that there are some services that will give you a hard time during implementation if you are looking at the documentation of Oracle. Sometimes the documentation information is quite limited. It's an aspect of the solution they could improve.

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LM
IT Project Manager at a comms service provider with 10,001+ employees

It is very hard to support Oracle Database.

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OT
Database Administrator at Contemi

There is room for improvement in PL/SQL. It is not user-friendly and it is hard to understand.

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ME
Production Systems Engineer at Enwe

When we troubleshoot, there are many tools that we need to use. One example is having to look at the system logs. The troubleshooting process should be improved so that we can resolve errors faster. 

Oracle demands a lot of memory and you need to have a strong machine.

In the next release, I would like to see a framework for memory management.

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it_user432795 - PeerSpot reviewer
Managing Director at CarajanDB

The licensing is a nightmare. Tons of options which need to be licensed individually, and no real offering for VMware or other Hypervisors.

And my favorite option – Multitenant – should be available for some pluggable databases in all editions without any fee.

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SH
CTO at a tech services company with 51-200 employees
  • Reduce the licensing cost further.
  • Stronger security
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Ahmad Hida - PeerSpot reviewer
Application and BI manager at Ithmaar-solutions

Some of the technical features could be improved. They have a problem with some of the object types. I think this is one of the issues which is needed to be improved. If they could implement a managing tool that is better than the one they have now, that would be an improvement.

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OO
Cloud Solutions Architect at Snapnet Limited

The solution uses a large amount of CPU space, which could be improved. 

We would also like to see a reduction in the licensing costs for using this solution, as it is quite costly.

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SL
Oracle DBA at a tech vendor with 51-200 employees

Oracle Database as a Service could improve the provisioning. You have to recreate on-premise hardware environments in the cloud, it was not very intuitive.

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it_user452340 - PeerSpot reviewer
CEO at Miracle Finland Oy

I think most of the customers are hoping for having 24/7 kind of support for if anything happens during the night, they will fix it without you knowing it. Of course there will be an extra cost for the customer but it shouldn't be too much. That's what I think most of the customers will be happy with. You don't have to have your own operators to look after your operation system and the databases and so on and Oracle would look after all that. They have those services but I think they're a bit expensive at the moment.

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it_user433491 - PeerSpot reviewer
Cloud Architect, Oracle ACE, Oracle DBA at Pythian

Some bugs could be fixed. There have been some internal software bugs, just like any other newly released software. These bugs gets fixed by patch updates from Oracle on regular basis.

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MV
Founder at a legal firm with 11-50 employees

The licensing model is complicated and should be simplified. There are different prices that depend on hardware and other factors.

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it_user622242 - PeerSpot reviewer
Sub-Manager IT Infrastructure at a tech services company with 201-500 employees

I would like to see a better dashboard for the storage. It need to be more complete overall. At the moment, it is basic. 

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Buyer's Guide
Oracle Database as a Service
April 2024
Learn what your peers think about Oracle Database as a Service. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: April 2024.
768,578 professionals have used our research since 2012.