Oracle’s History (Continue)
- 1977
- Relational Software Inc. (RSI - currently Oracle Corporation) established
- 1978
- Oracle V1 ran on PDP-11 under RSX, 128 KB max memory. Written in assembly language. Implementation separated Oracle code and user code. Oracle V1 was never officially released.
- 1980
- Oracle V2 released - the first commercially available relational database to use SQL. Oracle runs on on DEC PDP-11 machines. Coide is still written in PDP-11 assembly language, but now ran under Vax/VMS.
- 1982
- Oracle V3 released, Oracle became the first DBMS to run on mainframes, minicomputers, and PC’s (portable codebase).First release to employ transactional processing.Oracle V3’s server code was written in C.
- 1983
- Relational Software Inc. changed its name to Oracle Corporation.
- 1984
- Oracle V4 released, introduced read consistency, was ported to multiple platforms, first interoperability between PC and server.
- 1986
- Oracle V5 released. Featured true client/server, VAX-cluster support, and distributed queries. (first DBMS with distributed capabilities).
- 1987
- CASE and 4GL toolset
- 1988
- Oracle V6 released - PL/SQL introduced.Oracle Financial Applications built on relational database.
- 1989
- Released Oracle 6.2 with Symmetric cluster access using the Oracle Parallel Server
- 1991
- Reached power of 1,000 TPS on a parallel computing machine.First database to run on a massively parallel computer (Oracle Parallel Server).
- 1992
- Released Oracle7 for Unix
- 1993
- Rollout of Oracle’s Cooperative Development Environment (CDE).Introduction of Oracle Industries and the Oracle Media Server.
- 1994
- Oracle’s headquarters moved to present location.Released Oracle 7.1 and Oracle7 for the PC.
- 1995
- Reported gross revenues of almost $3 billion.
- 1995
- OraFAQ.com website launched.
- 1997
- Oracle8 released (supports more users, more data, higher availability, and object-relational features)
- 1998
- Oracle announces support for the Intel Linux operating system
- 1999
- Oracle8i (the “i” is for internet) or Oracle 8.1.5 with Java integration (JVM in the database)
- 2000
- Oracle8i Release 2 releasedOracle now not only the number one in Databases but also in ERP ApplicationsOracle9i Application Server generally available: Oracle tools integrated in middle tier
- 2001
- Oracle9i Release 1 (with RAC and Advanced Analytic Service)
- 2002
- Oracle9i Release 2
- 2004
- Oracle10g Release 1 (10.1.0) available (”g” is for grid, the latest buzzword)
- 2005
- The Oracle FAQ (this site) is 10 years old!Oracle10g Release 2 (10.2.0) availableOracle release a free version of their database, Oracle XE (Express Edition)ref: http://orafaq.com/faq/what_is_oracles_history
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