OpenWorld kicks off with SNL alumni skits, mellow Ellison
<<   November/2007   >>
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
        1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30  

Arts
Movies
Humor
Television
Music

Business
Internet
Finance
Jobs
Investing
Economy

Computers
Software
Hardware
World
Mobile

Games
Video Games
RPGs

Health
Fitness
Medicine
Alternative

Home
Consumers
Cooking

Recreation
Travel
Food
Outdoors

Reference
Psychology
Science
Education

Regional
US
Canada
Europe

Science
NSF
Space
Technology

Society
People
Religion

Sports
Baseball
Soccer
Basketball
 
12/Nov/2007 9:00AM
OpenWorld kicks off with SNL alumni skits, mellow Ellison
Oracle founder joins in good-natured look back as company turns 30

November 12, 2007 (Computerworld) -- Oracle Corp.'s public image may be that of a sharp-elbowed sales competitor and insatiable eater of terrified companies.

But during speeches kicking off the enterprise software vendor's annual OpenWorld conference in San Francisco Sunday night, the company showed a funnier, more humane side.

In a pair of keynotes by co-founder and CEO Larry Ellison and president and Chief Financial Officer Safra Catz that were collectively called "Sunday Night Live," the two -- especially Ellison -- waxed nostalgic about the now-30-year-old company's origins, especially its own Silicon Valley "start-up in a garage" days.

Ellison started Oracle's predecessor, Software Development Laboratories, in 1977 with $2,000 of his own money. Its first office was on the famed Sand Hill Road in Menlo Park, Calif., near Stanford University.

Things back then were done by the seat of Ellison's (and everyone else's) pants. One early employee, Staurt Feigin, reminisced via video how when Bank of America Corp., which Ellison was approaching for a start-up loan, demanded a balance sheet, neither he nor Ellison knew what one was.

"We had to go and study some annual reports to figure it out," he said.

Feigin, who worked at Oracle for 20 years and is now a venture capitalist, also recalled stuffing all of Oracle's early receipts into a shoe box.

Safra Catz was not chosen to be Oracle's first accountant because, unlike the other candidate, according to Ellison, "she didn't have a car."

At an early meeting with a firm bidding to become Oracle's European sales representative, Ellison recalled discovering "that they were trying to hide the fact that they were a four-person company, while we had been trying to hide the fact that we were a seven-person company."

Unlike Google Inc., which is known for fetishizing its employees' academic records to the point of asking middle-aged candidates what their college grades were, Ellison -- himself a college dropout -- touted Oracle's unconventionality.

"It was well-known that we were an MBA-free zone," he said. "I am only half-kidding."

That's news to them

The keynotes were interspersed with skits by former and current Saturday Night Live cast members, including Kevin Nealon, Victoria Jackson and Darrell Hammond.

One of the better jokes was a quip by Hammond, playing a CEO of a company facing an Oracle takeover bid.

"Take off your gas masks. Oracle never uses tear gas on the first opportunity," he said to his employees, cowering under the table.

Nealon, who played a news anchor for many years on SNL, joked in his deadpan delivery that "OpenWorld faced a slowdown today after a strange package appeared on Ellison's doorstep.




Recent news in category
Image Gallery: Bill Gates Now . . . and Then
Image Gallery: Bill Gates Now . . . and Then
Complete coverage: Bill Gates Moves On

Global recent news
Stocks Surge on Geithner Pick
FRA - Shy and retiring Melain proud of trophy-laden career
Dodie Smith

12/Nov/2007 9:00AM
Some doctors and health care IT executives are applauding the government's plan to use financial incentives to encourage doctors to adopt e-health records. But not everyone is convinced it will be enough.

12/Nov/2007 9:00AM
Frank Hayes speculates that Google's mobile phone software is a winner, even if it loses in the marketplace.

12/Nov/2007 9:00AM
Microsoft disclosed in an internal memo that it had fired CIO Stuart Scott after determining that he had violated unspecified corporate policies.

12/Nov/2007 9:00AM
Kent Beck touts about shorter development cycles and says agile methods can detect unworkable software projects more quickly.

12/Nov/2007 9:00AM
Microsoft Corp. will push a trio of performance and reliability updates to Windows Vista users tomorrow using its Windows Update automated service.

Copyright © 2006 Rootio Ltd. All rights reserved.