Oracle and Google Cloud announced a collaboration that allows customers to combine Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) and Google Cloud technologies to help accelerate their application migrations and modernization.
The new multicloud capabilities deliver a fully integrated experience for deploying, managing, and using Oracle database instances within Google Cloud along with the ability to move data and deploy new cloud native applications across both clouds.
Google Cloud’s new offering, Oracle Database@Google Cloud, will offer the highest level of Oracle database and network performance, along with feature and pricing parity with OCI.
Oracle Database@Google Cloud gives customers direct access to Oracle database services running on OCI and deployed in Google Cloud data centers.
Both companies will jointly go to market with Oracle Database@Google Cloud, benefitting enterprises globally and across multiple industries, including financial services, healthcare, retail, manufacturing, and more.
“Customers want the flexibility to use multiple clouds,” said Larry Ellison, Oracle Chairman and CTO. “To meet this growing demand, Google and Oracle seamlessly connect Google Cloud services with the latest Oracle Database technology. Customers can benefit from the best possible database and network performance by putting Oracle Cloud Infrastructure hardware in Google Cloud data centers.
“Oracle and Google Cloud have many joint enterprise customers,” said Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and Alphabet. “This new partnership will help these customers use Oracle database and applications in concert with Google Cloud’s innovative platform and AI capabilities.”
A simplified purchasing and contracting experience via Google Cloud Marketplace that enables customers to purchase Oracle database services. Unified customer experience and support from Google Cloud and Oracle.
Oracle will operate and manage Oracle database services directly within Google Cloud data centers globally, beginning with North America and Europe regions.
Oracle Exadata Database Service, Oracle Autonomous Database Service, and Oracle Real Application Clusters (RAC) will launch later this year across four regions—US East (Ashburn), US West (Salt Lake City), UK South (London), and Germany Central (Frankfurt)—and then rapidly expand to additional regions worldwide.
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