A couple weeks ago, Oracle gave MySQL a knife in the back by buying out Innobase and walking away with the rights to several features that MySQL had long used for its own products. This went hand in hand with Oracle’s announcement of a free “lite” version of its 10g database in an obvious attempt to lure potential customers who might be contemplating the open source route.Now Oracle’s on the wrong side of the blade. Microsoft has unveiled SQL Server 2005, which it hopes will compete feature-for-feature with Oracle and IBM’s enterprise database offerings. Like Oracle Microsoft is offering a free “express” version (aka–limited to a single CPU, a gigabyte of RAM and a 4GB databases size–eerily identical to Oracle’s Database Lite). But Microsoft is also dangling a 50-percent discount to anyone looking to migrate from Oracle to Microsoft. Oh, and during all this, MySQL announced the official “production ready” release of MySQL 5.0, the first version to include noticeable absentees from previous versions, including store procedures and triggers. The database market hasn’t seen this much action since the Borland vs. Microsoft desktop database wars of the mid 90s. But is it good news for customers? Probably yes, at least in the short term. These sorts of fights tend to drive down end-user costs and rapidly improve feature sets. In the long term, however, such business altercations tend to leave casualties (remember Ashton-Tate?)–and a single dominator in a given space. The open source movement helps temper the ability for any company to completely control a market (WordPerfect and WordStar may be gone, for instance, but OpenOffice lives. [Ed Note: OK, I’m an idiot. WP is far from gone. Apologies to Corel.]) But you always have to worry when the “competitive upgrade” and “free version” fever hits–people sometimes start forgetting that the goal of business is actually to make money. Related content feature Red Hat embraces hybrid cloud for internal IT The maker of OpenShift has leveraged its own open container offering to migrate business-critical apps to AWS as part of a strategy to move beyond facilitating hybrid cloud for others and capitalize on the model for itself. By Paula Rooney May 29, 2023 5 mins CIO 100 Technology Industry Hybrid Cloud feature 10 most popular IT certifications for 2023 Certifications are a great way to show employers you have the right IT skills and specializations for the job. These 10 certs are the ones IT pros are most likely to pursue, according to data from Dice. By Sarah K. White May 26, 2023 8 mins Certifications Careers interview Stepping up to the challenge of a global conglomerate CIO role Dr. Amrut Urkude became CIO of Reliance Polyester after his company was acquired by Reliance Industries. He discusses challenges IT leaders face while transitioning from a small company to a large multinational enterprise, and how to overcome them. By Yashvendra Singh May 26, 2023 7 mins Digital Transformation Careers brandpost With the new financial year looming, now is a good time to review your Microsoft 365 licenses By Veronica Lew May 25, 2023 5 mins Lenovo Podcasts Videos Resources Events SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER From our editors straight to your inbox Get started by entering your email address below. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe