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BEA, Oracle users fear price hikes, dumping of products

Users from both camps turn a wary eye to Oracle's $8.5 billion agreement to buy BEA

January 16, 2008 12:00 PM ET

Computerworld - Users of technology from both companies today expressed concern about Oracle Corp.'s $8.5 billion agreement to buy BEA Systems Inc. and to fold in the latter's middleware to the Oracle software stack.

The BEA board of director's vote to approve the sale for $19.375 per share came just three months after it spurned Oracle's $6.7 billion offer in October to buy the software vendor.

Burc Oral, a senior architect at Cambridge, Mass.-based government contractor CellExchange Inc., said that while the acquisition will give users the option of buying a database and an application server from a single vendor, he also expects a period of "confusion" for BEA users because of technology overlap.

Oral, who also heads the New England BEA Users Group, said that he expects that the deal will likely mean the end of some products -- "a little from Oracle and a lot from BEA."

He said that Oracle would be well served to retain BEA's WebLogic product, which has a hearty following among users, who have been provided with good support from BEA over the years. "[BEA] had their [WebLogic] product out there many years before Oracle was out there," Oral said. "[It] is very easy to use, and BEA has always been very friendly to the user community with downloads and documentation. Oracle doesn't have this wide acceptance from the user community in terms of applications. With BEA, life is a lot easier."

But, he noted that since Oracle made its first bid for BEA in October, the middleware firm has been less responsive than usual to the user group. In addition, Oral said that users from previous Oracle acquisitions including Siebel Systems Inc. and Hyperion Solutions Corp. appear to be "getting better value" from a larger organization that they did before the acquisition.

Jim Burgard, assistant vice chancellor of university computing and communication at the University of New Orleans, said that he doesn't expect the deal to significantly affect his organization, which uses WebLogic with Oracle's PeopleSoft applications. However, he added that he "does have some concerns about future licensing and maintenance costs now that all the components are owned by one vendor."

Mike Gilpin, an analyst at Forrester Research Inc., said that Burgard's fear is not unfounded, noting that support costs for users of BEA's WebLogic Server, AquaLogic Service Bus, AquaLogic BPM, WebLogic Event Server and AquaLogic SOA Management products could grow after the deal closes later this year.

Gilpin did note that Oracle has promised "lifetime support" for BEA products that overlap Oracle's offerings. That means that BEA users won't have to dump their BEA products but may over time pay more for support, he said. If they do move to Oracle's technology, they'll have to pay for migration, Gilpin added.



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