Oracle
Senaste nytt om Oracle - Nyheter, podcasts, videor och inlägg på sociala medier om Oracle.
Senaste nytt om Oracle - Nyheter, podcasts, videor och inlägg på sociala medier om Oracle.
Först efter DN:s avslöjande om att journalsystemet Millennium saknar CE-märkning registrerade tillverkaren kritiska delar av systemet i EU:s databas. Oracles Nordenchef Mike Pomerance skriver till DN att de funktioner som finns tillgängliga i lanseringen är märkta enligt gällande krav. Men klassningen motsvarar inte vårdens normalkrav för patientsäkerhet.
De amerikanska börserna spretade på måndagskvällen. Teknikjättar som Apple och Nvidia sjönk tydligt medan storbankerna steg. Dessutom fortsatte mjukvarubolaget Oracle upp vilket innebär att grundaren Larry Ellison återigen är världens näst rikaste man.
Efter fyra dagar i rad med uppgångar öppnade New York-börsen något upp på fredagen, samtidigt som Stockholmsbörsen var något upp. Räntebeskedet på onsdag börjar närma sig, och uppges stå i fokus för investerarna, och bland aktier med stora rörelser syns Adobe och Oracle.
Det amerikanska mjukvarubolaget Oracle rusade omkring 9 procent i den amerikanska efterhandeln efter att ha redovisat sina siffror för det första kvartalet 2025 i bolagets brutna räkenskapsår, samt ha meddelat ett nytt samarbete med Amazon Web Services (AWS).
Oracle Tile och tränaren Kristian Malmin missar chansen att vinna sex miljoner kronor. Hästen stryks i sista sekund efter en bevittnad överträdelse i övervakingsstallet – nu tävlar bara nio hästar i Åby World Grand Prix. ”Mitt hjärta är krossat”, skriver Malmin på Facebook.
Tanken var att en ny häst skulle bli klar till Åby Grand Prix. Istället blev två nya hästar klara – efter att ”Årets häst” Joviality tvingats lämna återbud. Superstjärnan Önas Prince ersätter och Oracle Tile skrällvann V75-3. – Det går nog inte att göra en så mycket bättre prestation, säger Magnus A Djuse i TV4.
Wall Street drar en suck av lättnad och handlar upp de ledande börsindexen till nya rekordnivåer efter att USA:s majinflation sjunkit oväntat. Teknikbolaget Oracle rusar på samarbetsavtal med Google och Open AI.
New York-börsen steg på tisdagen, stödd av uppgångar i indextunga it-jättar som Nvidia och Microsoft, som lyfte 7,2 respektive 2,6 procent. Aktien i mjukvarubolaget Oracle, som redovisade högre vinst under fjolårets sista kvartal än analytikernas hade spått, rusade 11,8 procent.
USA-börserna såg på tisdagseftermiddagen ut att öppna på ljusgrönt territorium. Detta i spåren av att inflationsstatistiken kommit in någorlunda i linje med förväntningarna. Bland bolagen backade Oracle i förhandeln efter en sämre rapport än väntat.
Många är de republikaner som högljutt motsatt sig ett amerikanskt förbud mot den omåttligt populära appen Tiktok. Gemensamt för flera av dem är att de på olika sätt har fått ta del av ekonomiska donationer från miljardären Jeff Yass och hans fru Janine, skriver Wall Street Journal. Yass beskriver sig som en tvättäkta libertarian, som vill minska statens inflytande över människors vardag, håller hårt på den fria viljan och yttrandefriheten. Han äger också sju procent av Tiktoks kinesiska ägarbolag Bytedance. Financier Jeff Yass made a big bet on the app, and he’s a top donor to lawmakers who support it By John D McKinnon
The Wall Street Journal, 20 September 2023 WASHINGTON— TikTok had hardly any friends in government earlier this year as the Biden administration, Congress and state legislatures were threatening to ban the Chinese-owned video giant. TikTok now has many more friends, with something in common: backing from billionaire financier Jeff Yass. They’ve helped stall attempts to outlaw America’s most-downloaded app. Yass’s investment company, Susquehanna International Group, bet big on TikTok in 2012, buying a stake in parent company ByteDance now measured at about 15%. That translates into a personal stake for Yass of 7% in ByteDance. It is worth roughly $21 billion based on the company’s recent valuation, or much of his $28 billion net worth as gauged by Bloomberg. Yass is also one of the top donors to the Club for Growth, an influential conservative group that rallied Republican opposition to a TikTok ban. Yass has donated $61 million to the Club for Growth’s political-spending arm since 2010, or about 24% of its total, according to federal records. Club for Growth made public its opposition to banning TikTok in March, in an opinion article by its president, at a time when sentiment against the platform among segments of both parties was running high on Capitol Hill. Days later, Sen. Rand Paul (R., Ky.) stood up on the Senate floor and quashed an attempt to fast-track a bill by Sen. Josh Hawley (R., Mo.) to ban downloading of the TikTok app. “We will be acting like the Chinese government if we ban TikTok here,” Paul said around that time. In June, Yass donated $3 million to a political committee backing Paul. Including that contribution, Yass and his wife, Janine Yass, have donated more than $24 million to Paul or committees that support him since 2015, according to federal records. Club for Growth has given a Paul-supporting political committee $1.8 million since 2020. Another Club for Growth-backed Republican who came out against a TikTok ban was Rep. Thomas Massie (R., Ky.), an important ally of House Speaker Kevin McCarthy. Massie urged House GOP leadership to oppose a different effort in the Senate, a bipartisan bill targeting TikTok that had the backing of the Biden administration, people familiar with the situation say. Since 2020, Jeff and Janine Yass have given $32,200 to Massie or a political-action committee supporting him. Club for Growth has been Massie’s biggest overall political contributor since 2011, directing $192,000 to him from the organization’s supporters, according to OpenSecrets, a nonpartisan group that tracks political contributions. A spokesman for Massie said the congressman doesn’t like TikTok, but banning it wasn’t right because “the cure is worse than the disease.” A spokeswoman for Paul said his “opposition to censorship and his unwavering support for the First Amendment are consistent and deeply held libertarian beliefs.” Both libertarian-minded Republicans have broken party lines in the past to take hard-line stances on protecting free speech. Other Republicans in Congress, including at least five others besides Paul and Massie who received financial support from Club for Growth, have also objected to legislation targeting TikTok. With many Democrats already skeptical of a ban, the whittling away of Republican support killed momentum for several bills, including the bipartisan Restrict Act backed by the Biden administration. The lobbying effort by Yass is notable in part because of the extent of his political spending—he and his wife were the third-largest conservative donors nationally in the 2022 election cycle, chipping in about $49 million to support conservative candidates and causes, according to OpenSecrets. The investment Yass has been seeking to protect in Washington is both valuable and vulnerable. While much of the potential legislation could affect multiple companies, and many businesses including Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba Group and Australian financial services firm Macquarie Group have been lobbying Congress to protect these interests, the laws would have an outsize effect on TikTok. “I’ve supported libertarian and free market principles my entire adult life,” Yass said. “TikTok is about free speech and innovation, the epitome of libertarian and free market ideals. The idea of banning TikTok is an anathema to everything I believe.” TikTok parent ByteDance often is described as the world’s most valuable startup—last year it valued itself at $300 billion when it bought back shares from existing investors. Its ultimate goal is to go public, most likely in Asia, and the value of its IPO would be badly damaged if TikTok were banned in the U.S. Some leading Biden administration officials and Congress members say the Chinese government could order ByteDance to spy on American TikTok users, or determine what videos they watch. A spokeswoman for TikTok said the company wouldn’t comply with such a request and that it has proposed to the Biden administration a $1.5 billion plan to silo its U.S. operations from China. TikTok’s own lobbying efforts in Washington have included hundreds of meetings and other contacts, according to a person familiar with the matter. One of its main arguments to Republicans has been that a majority of ByteDance’s shareholders are Americans, and some are well-connected conservatives, this person said. The lobbying appears to have helped push House Republican lawmakers to back away from the idea of a ban on TikTok and focus instead on legislation that would put new legal protections in place for users’ personal data. “One idea was to ban it, another idea was to protect the data,” McCarthy, the House speaker, said in an interview. “At one time, it looked like the ban was the most powerful, but now it looks like maybe this [is the] real solution…It’s like, I’m taking a different road to a different place, but we’re all going the same place.” Hawley chalks the change up to the TikTok influence campaign. “TikTok and its dark-money cronies are spending vast amounts of money to kill these bills,” he said when asked about the role of Yass and Club for Growth in the debate over TikTok. Along with backing GOP candidates who support its views, the Club for Growth often targets Republican incumbents who don’t agree with its priorities by supporting rivals in primary contests. Some conservatives and libertarian members of Congress have traditionally rejected what they believe are intrusions by the government into free speech and how businesses operate, issues some have raised with the TikTok bills. Others have also opposed the legislation, including media figures such as Tucker Carlson. Club for Growth began making TikTok a priority around late 2022, when the U.S. government banned federal employees from using TikTok on work devices, said Club for Growth president David McIntosh. McIntosh said the group started asking political candidates seeking Club for Growth’s financial support a new question: What’s your view on the TikTok ban? As TikTok faced growing political risk, Yass consulted with Club for Growth periodically, asking which members of Congress would be willing to take a side on the issue, said McIntosh, a former Republican congressman from Indiana. McIntosh wrote his opinion column without consulting Yass beforehand, he said, though he did show Yass the column after it was published on the Fox News website. “He liked it,” McIntosh said. Both Yass and Club for Growth oppose a TikTok ban because they say individual Americans, not the government, should decide what content people can view, McIntosh said. “It’s a natural alignment of his libertarian philosophy, which is what he uses to direct his political giving,” McIntosh said of Yass. “It also aligns in this case with his financial interests.” Sam Chen, a Pennsylvania-based Republican political consultant who has worked for some Yass-backed candidates, said Yass’s financial interests align with his philosophy of limited government. “Jeffrey Yass is a libertarian,” Chen said. “He’s supporting people that vote this way. This is kind of how politics works.” The 65-year-old Yass, who grew up in Queens, N.Y., made his first riches when he and poker-playing buddies from the State University of New York at Binghamton found ways to tilt horse-racing odds in their favor. The classmates went on to found Susquehanna. In the 1980s, the Philadelphia-area firm helped pioneer the use of quantitative models and computers to make rapid-fire trades for stock options and other securities. Poker is central to Susquehanna’s approach. New hires train by playing Texas Hold’em, Yass told a podcast in 2020, where they learn to analyze probabilities and to size up their rivals. “The analogy between being a poker player and a trader—the same kind of decision-making theory—is very similar,” said Yass, who finished 12th in a World Series of Poker event in 2013. More recently Susquehanna has moved into venture-capital and private-equity investments, including in Chinese tech startups. Susquehanna invested $2.08 million in ByteDance in 2012, the year it was founded, and its funds have contributed hundreds of millions of dollars since, according to a lawsuit over compensation brought against Susquehanna by contractors who worked in China. Besides ByteDance, Susquehanna’s Chinese office lists on its website nearly 400 other companies it has invested in. They include Home Inn, one of China’s largest budget hotel chains, and a variety of tech companies. At Club for Growth, McIntosh said the question about the TikTok ban posed to candidates was designed to “suss out how they think about issues” and that Yass never insisted Club for Growth take a stand on TikTok. “Jeff would never direct the Club for Growth to take an action or a position on things,” said McIntosh. “But we naturally aligned on how we choose candidates.” Some Club-endorsed politicians, including Sen. Marco Rubio (R., Fla.), have strongly supported a TikTok ban. Club for Growth also supports issues such as free trade, school choice and spending cuts. Some GOP Congressional staffers took note of the Yass-TikTok connection this spring. “Club for Growth shilling for TikTok and what a coincidence that Jeff Yass is invested,” one staffer wrote in a text to others, seen by The Wall Street Journal. Rep. Anna Paulina Luna (R., Fla.), who according to OpenSecrets received $61,000 from Club for Growth supporters for her 2022 election campaign, said she hasn’t discussed a TikTok ban with Yass or McIntosh. She said she supports a ban on TikTok but considers the Biden-backed Restrict Act to be government overreach. She said she prefers legislation that bans TikTok without giving officials broader powers. Luna attributes the stalling of TikTok legislation to two factors: lawmakers who underestimate the national security risk of the Chinese-owned app, and lobbying by TikTok and its allies. As calls for banning the social-media app grew louder earlier this year, TikTok hired top-flight political strategists and rallied the platform’s popular influencers to show members of Congress the app’s popularity. U.S. companies with operations in China, which could be vulnerable to potential retaliation from Beijing if the U.S. moved against TikTok, also opposed a ban. Many other U.S. companies have a stake in TikTok’s continued operations, including Oracle, which hosts TikTok data on its cloud servers. “There’s a lot of money [going into] keeping TikTok on people’s phones,” Luna said. TikTok has disputed claims that user data could be turned over to the Chinese government ever since former President Donald Trump sought to ban the app in 2020, an effort blocked by two federal judges who ruled that Trump exceeded his authority. TikTok later announced its $1.5 billion plan to further safeguard U.S. data, dubbing it “Project Texas” in a nod to the expanded role it meant for Austin-based Oracle. The plan is designed to protect the data of American users from China by storing it in a U.S.-based subsidiary operated by U.S.-government-approved employees and board directors. The Treasury Department-led national-security panel called the Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. earlier this year ordered ByteDance to sell or face a ban, according to people familiar with the matter. ByteDance in recent weeks met with Cfius officials again to discuss its proposal to protect data, according to two people familiar with the matter. The Biden administration hasn’t indicated any change in its effort to ban the app or force its sale. It could still try to use executive powers to ban it, or force a sale to remove Chinese control. But without legislation, analysts say those orders could be overturned in court, as shown by the Trump-era court rulings. Such doubts helped trigger a range of legislative proposals such as the proposed Restrict Act by Sens. Mark Warner (D., Va.) and John Thune (R., S.D.), which would give the Commerce Secretary authority to ban information platforms owned by companies in adversarial countries such as China. TikTok and its allies said the Restrict Act would give the government too much power—a point that dovetails with the libertarian ethos of Yass and Club for Growth. Rep. Rick McCormick (R., Ga.), said he didn’t know Club for Growth opposed a TikTok ban when he received $115,000 from the group’s supporters, according to OpenSecrets, for his 2022 campaign. But he said the group’s position is “very much consistent with my worldview.” “It’s a dangerous precedent to start telling society what they can or can’t access, even if it’s detrimental,” he said. “Communist countries do that.” Other Club for Growth-backed House Republicans who oppose the Warner-Thune bill include Harriet Hageman (R., Wyo.) and Barry Moore (R., Ala.). Hageman said she has concerns about TikTok but that she opposed the Warner-Thune bill because of “overreach and constitutionality issues” that would enable more censorship of free speech. Moore said the legislation “poses a threat to the First Amendment rights of law-abiding citizens.” More recent proposals still under development on Capitol Hill have scaled back the powers the government could wield against platforms such as TikTok compared with the Restrict Act, but would still allow for forced divestment of companies that pose an undue national-security risk, according to a draft of the Senate Commerce Committee plan. The debate over banning TikTok has also surfaced on the GOP presidential primary campaign trail. The candidates Yass has backed—Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina—both share his support for school choice and other issues. They have also taken a measured approach on TikTok compared with Trump. Representatives for Trump didn’t respond to a request for comment. Yass gave a committee backing DeSantis $100,000 in February 2022, then added $2.5 million a year later. DeSantis signed a bill to ban TikTok on state-issued devices in May, months after 21 other GOP governors had approved similar bans during a six-week period from last November to January. In July, DeSantis said he would weigh a nationwide ban of TikTok if elected president. That came after Yass donated a total of $600,000 between March and June to a political committee backing Scott. Scott is alone among leading GOP presidential primary candidates in not advocating for a TikTok ban, although he has said he thinks it’s best to separate the data of American users from China. The DeSantis campaign didn’t respond to requests for comment. A spokesman for the Scott campaign said the candidate has consistently fought for tougher action against China. —Brody Mullins and Raffaele Huang contributed to this article.
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In this episode, Lois Houston and Nikita Abraham, along with Rohit Rahi, look at two important services that Oracle Cloud Infrastructure provides: Compute and Load Balancing. They also discuss the basics of instances. Oracle MyLearn: https://mylearn.oracle.com/ Oracle University Learning Community: https://education.oracle.com/ou-community X (formerly Twitter): https://twitter.com/Oracle_Edu LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/oracle-university/ Special thanks to Arijit Ghosh, Kiran BR, David Wright, the OU Podcast Team, and the OU Studio Team for helping us create this episode. -------------------------------------------------------- Episode Transcript: 00:00 Welcome to the Oracle University Podcast, the first stop on your cloud journey. During this series of informative podcasts, we’ll bring you foundational training on the most popular Oracle technologies. Let’s get started. 00:26 Nikita: Hello and welcome to the Oracle University Podcast. I’m Nikita Abraham, Principal Technical Editor with Oracle University, and with me is Lois Houston, Director of Innovation Programs. Lois: Hi there. You’re listening to our Best of 2023 series, where over the last few weeks, we’ve been revisiting our most popular episodes of the year. 00:47 Nikita: In today’s episode, which is #5 of 6, we’ll listen in to a conversation Lois and I had earlier this year with Rohit Rahi, Vice President of CSS OU Cloud Delivery, on OCI Compute and Load Balancing. We began by asking Rohit why one would use Load Balancer. Lois: So let’s get right to it! 01:06 Rohit: You would use Load Balancer to achieve high availability and also achieve scalability. So typically the way Load Balancer works is, they're also referred to as Reverse Proxies, you would have a Load Balancer, which would be used accessed by multiple clients, various clients. And these clients would hit the Load Balancer, and the Load Balancer would proxy that traffic to the various backend servers. So in this way, it not only protects the various backend servers, but also provides high availability. In case a particular backend server is not available, the application can still be up and running. And then it also provides scalability because if lots of clients start hitting the Load Balancer, you could easily add more backend servers. And there are several other advanced capabilities like SSL termination and SSL passthrough and a lot of other advanced features. So the first type of Load Balancer we have in OCI is a layer 7 Load Balancer. Layer 7 basically means it understands HTTP and HTTPS. That's the OSI model. And then there are various capabilities available here. 02:13 Nikita: The Load Balancer comes in two different shapes, right? Can you tell us a little about that? Rohit: One is called a flexible shape where you define the minimum and the maximum and you define the range. And your Load Balancer can achieve any kind of-- support any kind of traffic in that particular range, going from 10 Mbps all the way to 8 Gbps. The second kind of shape is called dynamic where you predefine the shapes. So you have micro, small, medium, large, and you predefine the shape. And you don't have to warm up your Load Balancer. If the traffic comes to that particular shape, the Load Balancer automatically scales. 02:53 Rohit: You can always do a public and a private Load Balancer. Public means Load Balancer is available on the web. Private means your multiple tiers, like a web tier, can talk to your database tier and balance the traffic between them, but both tiers don't have to be public. A Load Balancer is highly available, highly scalable by design. 03:12 Lois: And what about the second type of Load Balancer? Rohit: The second kind of Load Balancer we have in OCI is called the Network Load Balancer. And as the name specify, Network Load Balancer operates at layer 4, layer 3, and layer 4 so it understands TCP, UDP, also supports ICMP. Again, like HTTP Load Balancer, it has both public and a private option, so you could create a public Network Load Balancer or a private Network Load Balancer. It's highly available, highly scalable, all those features are supported. 03:42 Nikita: Now, why would you use Network Load Balancer over an HTTP Load Balancer? Rohit: The primary reason you would use it is it's much faster than HTTP Load Balancer. It has much lower latency. So if performance is a key criteria for you, go with Network Load Balancer. On the contrary, the HTTP Load Balancer has higher level intelligence because it can look at the packets, it can inspect the packets, and it gets that intelligence. So if you're looking for that kind of routing intelligence, then go with HTTP Load Balancer. 04:15 Rohit: So OCI Compute service provides you virtual machines and bare metal servers to meet your compute and application requirements. The three defining characteristics of this service include this scalability, high performance, and lower pricing. So the first thing in the OCI Compute service is you have this notion of flexible shape. What does it mean? Well, it means you could choose your own course, your CPU processors, and you could also choose your own memory. Literally, there are thousands and thousands of configurations you can choose from. 04:49 Lois: But what’s the use of doing this? Rohit: The use of doing this is you could select the right machine type by using our flexible shapes. And in the cloud, there's this notion of T-shirt sizing. So you have a small, medium, large kind of shapes, and your application has to fit those shapes. And sometimes you overprovision or underprovision, and you have to go through that painful process of changing your machine types. We hope with this flexible shapes, you don't have to do that. 05:20 Rohit: If you still want to use the traditional approach, we have virtual machines, we have bare metal servers, and we have dedicated host. And you could use either one of them or all of them. And bare metal servers basically means you get a full machine, a full server which is completely dedicated to you. Dedicated host basically means that you get a full dedicated bare metal machine. But on top of that, you could run virtual machines. Not only this, but OCI is only one of the two cloud providers to provide you options on processors. So you can run AMD-based instances, you could run Intel-based instances, and you could also run Arm-based instances-- are really a powerful thing for mobile computing. The phones you are using today are probably running on Arm processors. Now, Arm is coming into the data centers. 06:16 Have something interesting to share with the Oracle University Learning Community? Present your topic at an exclusive community event. Help yourself by helping others. Start building your reputation and personal brand today. If you are already an Oracle MyLearn user, go to MyLearn to join the community. You will need to log in first. If you have not yet accessed Oracle MyLearn, visit mylearn.oracle.com and create an account to get started. 06:48 Nikita: What can you tell us about the pricing of this, Rohit? Rohit: On the pricing side, the service implements pay-as-you-go pricing. We are 50% cheaper than any other cloud out there, just to begin with. And not only that, you could use something like a Preemptable VMs to reduce your cost by more than 50% from your regular instances. Preemptable VMs are low cost, short lived VMs suited for batch jobs and fault tolerant workloads. These are similar to regular instances, but priced 50% lower. So you can use them to reduce your cost further. So when we say an instance, what we mean is a compute host. And it has several dependencies. So let's look at them. 07:31 Rohit: So you have an Oracle Cloud region here. A region is comprised of multiple ADs. An AD is nothing but a data center. The first dependency the compute service has or compute hosts have is on Virtual Cloud Network. So in order to spin up a compute instance, you need a Virtual Cloud Network. You have a network divided into smaller portions called subnets. So you have a subnetwork here, and you need to create these before you can spin up a compute host. 08:00 Rohit: Now you can spin up a compute host. It's a physical construct. Networking is a virtual construct. So how are they related? Within a compute host, you have a physical network interface card, and you virtualize that card. We give you this virtual NIC. And that virtual NIC is placed inside the subnet. And that's the association for the compute host. And that's where the private IP for the compute host comes from, because every compute host or VM you are running, or a bare metal machine, has a private IP address. Now, there is another set of dependency the compute instances have, and that's to the boot volume and the boot disk and the block volumes. 08:42 Lois: What does that mean, exactly? Rohit: Well, each of these compute hosts you are spinning up has an operating system. And the image that's used to launch an instance determines its operating system and other software. So you have this concept of an image that comes from this network storage disk called a boot disk. So it doesn't stay on the compute host, it's actually living on the network somewhere. And you also have data, like file systems, etc. You're working on the compute instances. They also live on the network. So there is the data disks and operating system disks together. There's a service called block volume service which the compute host uses to run its operating system and run its data disks. Now, these are remote storage. 09:33 Rohit: There is one more feature which is really relevant when you are talking about compute instances, and that's live migration. We know that computers fail all the time. So how do we make sure that whatever compute host you are running is always up and running, itself? So we have this feature called live migrate. And the idea here is if one of the compute hosts goes down, there's a problem, we would migrate your VM to another host in our data center, and it will be transparent to you. There are multiple options you provide-- whether opt-in or opt-out-- you can choose from. But the idea is we migrate your virtual machines so you can live-migrate between hosts without rebooting. This keeps your applications running even during maintenance events. To achieve this in your own data centers is a not-so-trivial task, but we make that seamless within OCI. 10:22 Nikita: Thanks for that, Rohit. To learn more about OCI, please visit mylearn.oracle.com, create a profile if you don’t already have one, and get started on our free OCI Foundations training. Lois: You will find skill checks that you can take throughout the course to ensure that you are on the right track. Nikita: We hope you enjoyed that conversation. Join us next week for our final throwback episode. Until then, this is Nikita Abraham... Lois: And Lois Houston, signing off! 10:54 That’s all for this episode of the Oracle University Podcast. If you enjoyed listening, please click Subscribe to get all the latest episodes. We’d also love it if you would take a moment to rate and review us on your podcast app. See you again on the next episode of the Oracle University Podcast.
When you work with Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, one of the first steps is to set up a virtual cloud network (VCN) for your cloud resources. In this episode, Lois Houston and Nikita Abraham, along with Rohit Rahi, discuss Oracle’s Virtual Cloud Network, VCN routing, and security. Oracle MyLearn: https://mylearn.oracle.com/ Oracle University Learning Community: https://education.oracle.com/ou-community X (formerly Twitter): https://twitter.com/Oracle_Edu LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/oracle-university/ Special thanks to Arijit Ghosh, Kiran BR, Rashmi Panda, David Wright, the OU Podcast Team, and the OU Studio Team for helping us create this episode. --------------------------------------------------------- Episode Transcript: 00:00 Welcome to the Oracle University Podcast, the first stop on your cloud journey. During this series of informative podcasts, we’ll bring you foundational training on the most popular Oracle technologies. Let’s get started. 00:26 Lois: Hello and welcome to the Oracle University Podcast. I’m Lois Houston, Director of Innovation Programs with Oracle University, and with me is Nikita Abraham, Principal Technical Editor. Nikita: Hi everyone. We hope you’ve been enjoying these last few weeks as we’ve been revisiting our most popular episodes of the year. 00:47 Lois: Today’s episode is the fourth of six we’ll have in this series and it’s a throwback to a conversation with Rohit Rahi, our Vice President of CSS OU Cloud Delivery, talking about Networking in OCI. We began by asking Rohit to explain what a Virtual Cloud Network is. Let’s listen in. 01:06 Rohit: At its core, it's a private software defined network you create in Oracle Cloud. It's used for secure communication. Whether instances talking to each other, instances talking to on-premises environments, or instances talking to other instances in different regions, you would use Virtual Cloud Network. It lives in an OCI region. Like we said, it's a regional service. It's highly available, massively scalable, and secure. And we take care of these things for you. So before we dive deep into the VCN and all the characteristics and all the features it has, let's look at some of the basic stuff. 01:44 Rohit: So the first thing is VCN has an address space. In this case, you see this address space is denoted in a CIDR notation. CIDR stands for classless interdomain routing. The VCN has an IP addressing range. And what that means is you have an address range. You take that range. And you can break it down into smaller networks which are called subnetworks. And these subnetworks are where you would instantiate your compute instances. 02:16 Nikita: And what can you tell us about the different mechanisms that exist inside a VCN? Rohit: So first, there is a notion of internet gateway. This is a gateway which is massively scalable, highly available, and is used for communication to anything on the internet. So if you have a web server which wants to talk to other websites on the web being able to be accessed publicly, you would use an internet gateway. So going to the internet and coming back from the internet. You also have this highly available, massively scalable router called NAT gateway. And it is used for providing NAT as a service. 02:53 Rohit: So what this means is the traffic is unidirectional. It can go from your private subnets to the internet. But users from the internet cannot use the NAT gateway to reach your instances running in a private subnet. So the idea with the NAT gateway is to enable outbound communication to the internet, but block inbound communications or connections initiated from the internet. Then we have another router which is called Service Gateway. And the idea is it lets resources in VCN access public OCI services such as object storage, but without using an internet or NAT gateway. So these are the three scenarios-- Internet gateway for internet, NAT gateway also for internet but unidirectional, and Service gateway for accessing OCI public services, which are available on the internet but accessing them in a secure manner. And then the other construct is called Dynamic Routing Gateway. This is a virtual router that provides a path for private traffic between your VCN and destinations other than the internet. 04:00 Lois: So what can these destinations be? Rohit: Well, this can be your on-premises environment. VCN uses route tables to send traffic out of the VCN to the internet, to on-premises networks, or to peered VCN, and we look at each of these scenarios. Route tables consist of a set of route rules. Each rule specifies a destination CIDR block and a route target. Think about route target as the next hop for the traffic that matches that destination CIDR block. Now, one thing to keep in mind is traffic within the VCN subnet is automatically handled by the VCN local routing. 04:44 Lois: Want to get the inside scoop on Oracle University? Head on over to the all-new Oracle University Learning Community. Attend exclusive events. Read up on the latest news. Get first-hand access to new products and stay up-to-date with upcoming certification opportunities. If you are already an Oracle MyLearn user, go to MyLearn to join the Community. You will need to log in first. If you have not yet accessed Oracle MyLearn, visit mylearn.oracle.com and create an account to get started. Join the Community today! 05:20 Nikita: Getting back to our discussion… if you have multiple networks, how do they talk to each other? Rohit: So there are two scenarios which are possible here. If the networks are within the same OCI region, they can talk to each other through a mechanism called local peering. If the two networks are in two different OCI data center regions, then you have the same concept, a similar concept, but it's a remote peering now. And instead of using local peering, now you're using the Dynamic Routing Gateways. Remember we talked about Dynamic Routing Gateways used for on-premises communication, anything which is not for internet. So this is also a use case for Dynamic Routing Gateway enabling communication between networks in different regions. 06:05 Rohit: So within VCN, you have this concept of security list. Think about security list as firewall rules associated with a subnet and applied to all instances inside the subnet. So what does it look like? The security list consists of rules that specify the type of traffic allowed in or out of the subnet. This applies to a given instance, whether it is talking with another instance in the VCN or a host outside the VCN. There's also another concept, which is called network security groups, or NSG. These are very similar construct as security list, but the key difference is these apply only to a set of virtual network interface cards in a single VCN. And another big difference here is NSGs can be the source or destination in the rules. Contrast this with the security list rules where you specify a CIDR, only a CIDR, as the source or destination. 07:06 Lois: Thanks for that, Rohit. To learn more about OCI, please visit mylearn.oracle.com, create a profile if you don’t already have one, and get started learning on our free OCI Foundations training. Nikita: You can also practice what you learn in a safe environment with our hands-on labs, without the anxiety of working in a live environment. 07:27 Nikita: We hope you enjoyed that conversation. Join us next week for another throwback episode. Until then, this is Nikita Abraham... Lois: And Lois Houston, signing off! 07:37 That’s all for this episode of the Oracle University Podcast. 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Oedipus, famous for the awful advice of the Oracle and nothing more. Part One covers the aforementioned Oracle, and a little encounter with a sphinx and a father.CW/TW: far too many Greek myths involve assault. Given it's fiction, and typically involves gods and/or monsters, I'm not as deferential as I would be were I referencing the real thing.Attributions and licensing information for music used in the podcast can be found here: mythsbaby.com/sources-attributions. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This episode is part 1 of a 2-part series on the different types of divination used by witches. Part 1 talks about basic information to know about Tarot and Oracle cards, such as how to use them and recommendations on decks and books to look over. Want to know more about anything covered in today's episode, or want to enter into a future giveaway? Follow or message me at @SeekWitchcraft on Twitter! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/seekingwitchcraft/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/seekingwitchcraft/support
How impactful are stats in the Premier League? We had Amr from Oracle Cloud tell us all about it! We talk everything stats including expected Goals, most powerful goal, most improbable comeback and many more! We also discuss how players in the Premier League from the likes of Kevin De Bruyne, use stats from Oracle Cloud to negotiate their contracts! If you like stats, this is the episode for you!! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Hi, witchy friends! In this episode, I chat all about Tarot v. Oracle Cards, the importance of scaling back, and Witchling Wisdom! Grab yourself a cup of tea and get comfy, cozy and witchy with me! *Also, a number of you asked how you can support me/the podcast. I do this because I truly enjoy sharing about my craft, but if you feel so inclined, feel free to follow, rate, and review the podcast on Apple Podcasts, or check out my other witchy ventures over on IG - @fit_witch_challenge and @comfycozyapothecary ! *I also want to thank those of you who have subscribed, commented, rated, reviewed, and/or messaged me with words of encouragement about this podcast! I am truly grateful for you all and excited to bring you this witchy content!* Social Media: Instagram: @comfycozywitch FB Private Group: Comfy Cozy Witches Founder of @fit_witch_challenge
Today on the You Can Heal Your Life podcast, join fairy expert Karen Kay in conversation with holistic therapist Estelle Bingham as they discuss Karen’s brand-new oracle deck, Manifesting with the Fairies Oracle. You'll learn how to use the deck to connect with the elemental realm in order to embrace love, light, and moments of enlightenment. Plus, Karen offers practical tips for establishing a connection with fairies to enhance well-being and bring magic into everyday life. You can get your own Manifesting with the Fairies Oracle deck today by visiting hayhouse.com/fairies.
"If Croesus goes to war he will destroy a great empire." That was the prophecy the Oracle of Delphi delivered to the Lydian King - she just left out that fact it was his own empire that would be destroyed.Known as the Pythia, the Oracle of Delphi was the High Priestess of the Temple of Apollo at Delphi. Responsible for delivering divine prophecy to those that visited her - she was one of the most revered women in antiquity. In this episode, Tristan is joined by classicist and author Dr Garrett Ryan to talk all things prophecy. With fainting sheep, and godly intervention, was the Oracle really high on fumes - or is that a modern misconception?For more Ancients content, subscribe to our Ancients newsletter here. If you'd like to learn even more, we have hundreds of history documentaries, ad free podcasts and audiobooks at History Hit - subscribe today!
In the past, I've discussed how trading quests and seeking out information can shape areas in a Zelda game. For Oracle of Seasons and Oracle of Ages, Hidemaro Fujibayashi and his team chose to implement their incredible new ideas and mechanics around this philosophy in an effort to channel the original Zelda. The result is a wildly entertaining, challenging, puzzling, and ultimately enjoyable couple of games that don't get the attention they deserve. They're not perfect, but they represent a leap of faith for the developers, and for the rest of the series. Originally published March 14, 2021.
Wendy Jo and Ashley discuss the differences and similarities between a. Oracle and a Healer. Historically, an Oracle is typically a person or entity in mythology, religion, or folklore who is believed to have the ability to receive divine or supernatural information and provide insights or predictions about the future. Oracles often serve as intermediaries between humans and the divine, and their pronouncements are considered authoritative. They often are seen as those who deliver a message and not necessarily perform ongoing care to someone. A Healer, on the other hand, is someone who practices healing arts to promote physical, emotional, or spiritual well-being. Healers use various methods, including medicine, energy work, or holistic therapies, to help individuals recover from illnesses, injuries, or emotional distress. Healers focus on the well-being and health of individuals rather than providing prophetic or divinatory insights. In summary, Oracles provide insights and predictions based on supernatural or divine sources, while Healers work to promote healing and well-being through various therapeutic methods. There is overlap of one who is an Oracle and one who is a healer, and Wendy Jo and Ashley discuss this in detail. To connect with Ashley, go to: https://nursingsolutions.mykajabi.com To connect with Wendy Jo, go to: httos:// www.edgecoachingandconsulting.com
Do you sometimes get overwhelmed when looking at all of the different Tarot and Oracle decks not knowing which one to choose? We unravel the secrets behind the art of selecting your card decks and demystifying some myths while we’re at it. Madison shares a nostalgic tale of acquiring her first deck to Molly’s profound connection with the Akashic Tarot, you’ll get to know what our favorite decks are and how we use them in different scenarios. In this episode, you’ll discover the significance of connecting with a deck, cleansing rituals, why some people have multiple decks and even Madison’s way of fostering intimacy with a new deck. Hit play now and unlock the magical art of choosing and cleansing your tarot and oracle decks. 🔮Check out Molly’s favorite decks here: https://amzn.to/47XwDFt 🔮Check out Madison’s favorite decks here: https://thehealinghedgewitch.com/collections/madisons-favorite-decks 🔮 Join the waitlist for Reiki 1: The Science of Self-Healing: https://www.mollydonlan.com/reikiwait 🔮 Download the FREE Manifest with Reiki Ritual: https://www.mollydonlan.com/manifestwithreiki 🔮 Shop magical tools to enhance your practice, use code MAGIC to get 20% off your order: https://thehealinghedgewitch.com/ 🥳 Submit your questions/topic requests here: https://forms.gle/t8iwjYbA6Re4WTqN6 Let us know your thoughts: ✨ Demystify Magic instagram: @demystifymagic ✨ Molly’s instagram: @m0dizzl3 ✨ Madison’s instagrams: @madisonlillian.jpeg and @healinghedgewitch
Today I'm joined by Aubrey and Rose to chat all about Pluto and shadow via their brand new oracle deck. Author/illustrator duo Aubrey Houdeshell (@thegraveyardroses) and Rose Ides (@mothertao) are the creators of the recently-published deck The Oracle of Pluto, a dreamy 55-card oracle deck that guides readers through the foundations and rituals of shadow work, a spiritual practice long-associated with Plutonian archetypes—the unconscious self, rebirth, and transformation—to harness the cosmic insights of Pluto. The playful, psychedelic illustrations are meant to situate users in the transformative magic of Pluto, and representations of the planet’s many archetypes as shadow puppets infuse the deck with a whimsicality that counterbalances the intensity of the practice. Perfect for seekers of all kinds, The Oracle of Pluto celebrates the impressive insight that the dwarf planet provides in navigating life’s deepest questions. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/witch-wednesdays/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/witch-wednesdays/support
Welcome to the You Can Heal Your Life Podcast. Today is the first episode in our 3-part Oracle Card Reading series. Over the next 3 episodes, you’ll learn how oracle cards can be used as a tool to gain guidance and clarity in your life and the lives of others. Here in episode one, Colette Baron-Reid leads you on an exploration of her Enchanted Map Oracle deck. She’ll explain her philosophy on using oracle readings in a prescriptive way—empowering you to manifest the reality you desire through the choices you make. Do you want to know which card deck is best for YOU to work with to gain deep wisdom and clear direction? Take our free 8-question quiz where you’ll discover what kind of cards are the perfect match for you—tarot cards, oracle cards, angel cards, or affirmation cards. Stop struggling with life’s challenges and get the higher guidance that’s waiting for you. Visit hayhouse.com/ cards to take the quiz today!
In this episode Jason and Santi are joined by Mike Cahill, CEO of Douro Labs and contributor at Pyth Network, an oracle that publishes financial market data to multiple blockchains. The conversation delves into how Pyth Network addresses failings in both the current Oracle system in crypto and the traditional capital markets. Cahill discusses how the network has evolved, its present accomplishments, the benefits of their governance token, and their approach to rewards. To close out Mike outlines potential future developments and the network's greater aim of inviting widespread participation in its open-source projects.- -Follow Mike Cahill: https://twitter.com/mdomcahillFollow Santiago: https://twitter.com/santiagoroelFollow Empire: https://twitter.com/theempirepodSubscribe on YouTube: https://tinyurl.com/4fdhhb2jSubscribe on Apple: https://tinyurl.com/mv4frfv7Subscribe on Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/wbaypprwGet top market insights and the latest in crypto news. Subscribe to Blockworks Daily Newsletter: https://blockworks.co/newsletter/ - -Planning to grant token awards for your team? Toku makes implementing global token compensation and incentive awards simple.With Toku, you get unmatched legal and tax support to grant and administer your global team’s tokens. Toku navigates it across the lifecycle — from easy to use token grant award templates through tracking vesting to managing tax withholdings.Make it simple today, athttps://www.toku.com/empire- -Join us at DAS (Digital Asset Summit) in London this March! DAS is the #1 institutional conference in crypto, hosted by Blockworks. Use the link below to learn more, and use EMPIRE20 to get 20% off your ticket! Sign up now because the price goes up every month. See you there! Learn more + get your ticket here: https://blockworks.co/event/digital-asset-summit-2024-london/home- -Timestamps:00:00 The Market Data Monopoly09:13 The Oracle Problem21:19 Origins of Pyth30:40 The Business Model & Revenue40:21 DAS 202441:36 Toku Ad41:56 The Role of PYTH Token55:21 Reward Mechanism for Pyth Network- -Disclaimer: Nothing said on Empire is a recommendation to buy or sell securities or tokens. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and any views expressed by anyone on the show are solely our opinions, not financial advice. Santiago, Jason, and our guests may hold positions in the companies, funds, or projects discussed.
Welcome back to a brand-new season of the official Oracle Red Bull Racing Podcast, Talking Bull, brought to you by HP Poly. Each month throughout the season, our host, Nicola Hume, will be discussing everything Oracle Red Bull Racing, digging deeper into The Team than ever before. All recorded from the heart of Oracle Red Bull Racing HQ in Milton Keynes.You’ll be hearing from The Drivers, The Team bosses and those working behind the scenes in Milton Keynes, building the cars and keeping The Team moving throughout the season.Have a question for The Team? Submit your questions via The Paddock and we might answer it in the next episode.You can also watch Talking Bull in full for first time on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/redbullracing