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Oracle-BEA drama rocks middleware sector

Oracle-BEA drama rocks middleware sector

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 16 Oct 2007 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The possibility of further consolidation doesn't mean that independent software firms in this space don't have a role to play, according to Gartner and other analysts. A look at who's left

The possible acquisition of BEA Systems Inc. by Oracle Corp. will put the database vendor on par with IBM Corp. in the application infrastructure space, but there still is room for the remaining independent middleware vendors, analysts said.

A combined BEA and Oracle, by revenue, will be roughly equal to rival IBM minus its mainframe software, said Yefim Natis, vice-president with Stamford, Conn.-based Gartner Inc. "That essentially establishes a duopoly of Oracle and IBM in the application infrastructure space which is going to be very hard for anyone to approach and compete against."

Microsoft, too, he said, will share this position alongside Oracle and IBM.

Although the consolidation will serve to stabilize the middleware arena, said Natis, it may also mean rising prices and the commoditization of some basic technologies.

However, this possible consolidation doesn't signal the end for the remaining middleware vendors, said Natis. In particular, the JBoss Application Server will turn out to be a "beneficiary" when customers begin to seek an alternative to a BEA/Oracle offering "because JBoss has an outstanding product as an application server."

But it won't be a mass exodus, said Natis, although there will be an increase in deployment of JBoss if the acquisition goes through.

Other independent vendors in the middleware space won't be much affected, like Palo Alto, Calif.-based Tibco Software Inc. for instance, said Natis, given it offers services-oriented architecture infrastructure that's not BEA's core technology, and therefore not direct competition. "[Those vendors] are not interchangeable."

Independent middleware companies' ability to serve specific customer needs not offered by large vendors is reason enough to remain solo, said Ray Wang, principal analyst with Cambridge, Mass.-based Forrester Research Inc.

Actually, if BEA Systems – which commands more mind share than others in the space – gets acquired by Oracle, the move will make the remaining vendors more attractive to entities looking to leverage their position, said Wang.

"It's interesting when you take out one of the largest middleware vendors, it makes all the smaller vendors much more valuable and potentially other vendors who are trying to play catch-up are looking at them as other acquisition candidates."

Market leaders Oracle and IBM can be expected to further their inorganic growth strategies with acquisition of niche vendors, especially as services-oriented adoption evolves particularly towards business process management, said David Senf, director of security and software research with Toronto, Ont.-based analyst firm IDC Canada.

But acquisition by a large entity is not the sole remaining option for middleware vendors, thinks Natis, given the continued interest and demand for the likes of the independent middle guy. "There is always going to be a constituency, the users, who are best of breed users – those looking to buy technology from the innovators, the specialist."


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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