|  | Posted by DA Morgan on 09/17/05 07:58 
Hugo Kornelis wrote:> On Fri, 16 Sep 2005 08:39:56 -0700, DA Morgan wrote:
 >
 > (snip)
 >
 >> Anyway, from a commercial point of view, it appears
 >>
 >>>to me that Microsoft is doing the right thing. By making betas of the
 >>>new product available early on, more people get to play it, learn it
 >>>and know it, and will thus be more inclined to deploy it early on.
 >>
 >>Other software companies seem to do well keeping their Betas as Betas.
 >>I don't see SAP or IBM or anyone else thinking what you describe is
 >>ethical.
 >>
 >>
 >>>Since I have never used any Oracle product, I have no experience of they
 >>>run their betas. I would be suprised though, if they never make any betas
 >>>publically available, as most software vendors appear to do that at some
 >>>point in the cycle.
 >>
 >>Never. The vast majority of software companies never make Betas
 >>available to any other than qualified testers that will actuall use
 >>their software for purposes of testing.
 >>
 >>Anyone thinking they can get a copy of Oracle 11 should be prepared to
 >>buy Larry a new boat. I doubt anything less will put it into their
 >>hands today or tomorrow.
 >
 >
 > Hi DA,
 >
 > Did you google for "public beta" before posting this? I got over 2
 > million hits. Just the first two pages had links to public beta programs
 > of (among others) Norton AntiVirus 2006, Novell OpenEnterprise Server,
 > Macromedia Flash Player, IBM Lotus Notes/Domino 7, and many others.
 >
 > These companies apparently take quality serious, and take their
 > customers serious. They use the possibilities Internet offers to ensure
 > that their products are tested by a number of testers, and on a number
 > of configurations, that would never be achieved in a closed beta
 > program.
 >
 > It's sad to learn that Oracle, apparently, still values secrecy over
 > quality.
 >
 > Best, Hugo
 
 Flash Player ... now there's a serious piece of software.
 
 Just kidding. I guess I my views are somewhat outmoded given that I
 deal in large line-of-business commercial applications. Did you find
 any for Oracle? DB2? Informix? Sybase? ... Didn't think so.
 --
 Daniel A. Morgan
 http://www.psoug.org
 damorgan@x.washington.edu
 (replace x with u to respond)
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