Oracle readies stand-alone enterprise search
It hopes to do for corporate data what Google has done for public data online
March 2, 2006 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service - Oracle Corp. entered the stand-alone enterprise search market today with a new product that it hopes will do for corporate data what Google has done for public data on the Web.
Known as Oracle Secure Enterprise Search 10g, the stand-alone search engine is for use by corporations seeking to ensure that only authorized staff are able to access sensitive business information.
"We're very excited about this product," Oracle CEO Larry Ellison said during a keynote address at the Oracle OpenWorld Tokyo 2006 conference in Japan. "It's one of our biggest announcements for many, many years. It's the result of years of innovation and hard work."
Oracle Secure Enterprise Search 10g will support the searching of a company's databases, applications, file servers, repositories, Web portals, and internal and external Web sites, according to Sandeepan Banerjee, director of product management for objects and extensibility with Oracle. The search engine is integrated with multiple user authentication systems so that a particular user will be able to see only search results tied to the information he is authorized to view, Banerjee said in a telephone interview yesterday.
"Our search tool understands which information goes to which user," Greg Crider, senior director for technology marketing with Oracle, said during the phone interview.
That marks a key difference from Google, which doesn't do well searching private data, said Ellison.
"There is a reason why public search is available and popular but no one yet has done a good job on secure search," he said. "No one has done a good job yet searching private data, even though the private data is the most valuable data you have."
The system is built on an Oracle database, said Ellison.
"It's a separate database that indexes all of your data," he said. "There are crawlers -- in a sense, it is very similar to what Google does -- but you're not crawling the public Internet. You're crawling and indexing all of your private databases, Microsoft Word files and all your data and building in a separate Oracle database all these indexes."
As different as Google and Oracle's new applications might be, there is one area where they are very similar: the interface. The Web interface to Oracle's Secure Enterprise Search, shown during the keynote address, was very similar to the minimalist public Google search engine, with search types above a centrally placed text box and an "advanced search" link to the right of the box.
Oracle has 15 years of experience in full-text search technologies, incorporating such capabilities into its databases, data warehouse software and business intelligence tools, according to Banerjee. However, the new software will be the company's first stab at a stand-alone enterprise product. Previously, a customer that wanted such stand-alone capabilities had to do its own development work to build on top of the Oracle Text search technologies, Banerjee said.
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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