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We're in the midst of an application development renaissance. There is a plethora of new, exciting ideas and a new generation of developers who have embraced them. These ideas make application development faster, more likely to be successful, and have set a new, faster pace of application innovation.
The Oracle world is incredibly rich and incredibly powerful, but often misunderstood by this new generation. They can view Oracle's richness and power as just complexity which can be intimidating and a hindrance.
The New Generation Database Access is about three things:
The industry has latched onto the term "polyglot persistence" to describe this last point. (I personally hate this term. It sounds like a bad disease that won't go away but the idea behind it is a good one.)
The purpose of this blog and website is to facilitate interaction between the early adopters of Oracle's New Generation Database Access technologies such as REST and JSON and the development teams that produce them.
The Oracle world is incredibly rich and incredibly powerful, but often misunderstood by this new generation. They can view Oracle's richness and power as just complexity which can be intimidating and a hindrance.
The New Generation Database Access is about three things:
- Making it really easy for the new generation of developers to access the Oracle. We want to meet them 90% of the way on their own turf.
- Embracing (aka stealing) the best ideas from them and incorporating them into the Oracle world to make Oracle even better.
- Letting developers use the very best tools for each task while making it all work together smoothly and seamlessly.
The industry has latched onto the term "polyglot persistence" to describe this last point. (I personally hate this term. It sounds like a bad disease that won't go away but the idea behind it is a good one.)
The purpose of this blog and website is to facilitate interaction between the early adopters of Oracle's New Generation Database Access technologies such as REST and JSON and the development teams that produce them.