oracle logo

Oracle offers personalised support

Oracle has updated its customer support programme

Written by Madeline Bennett in San Francisco

At its OpenWorld event in San Francisco, Oracle launched an update to its customer support program designed to offer firms automated, personalised advice on their IT systems.

The latest version of Software Configuration Manager enables firms to upload their software information to Oracle’s support database. Oracle can then analyse the data and offer tailored advice on next best steps, the vendor said.

“It’s allowing firms to do systems management via online support,” said Chuck Roswat, executive vice president, Oracle Product Development. “You upload your software configurations via Oracle MetaLink and Oracle will make recommendations such as which patches should be applied based on what other customers with similar configurations look like.”

The tool is part of the vendor’s MetaLink support program, and is available now to Oracle Premier Support customers.

Tags:

reader comments

related articles

 

Oracle boosts partner training

Business applications vendor announces improvement to reseller training facilities at OpenWorld summit 30 Sep 2008

Oracle updates Java and e-business tools

Push for Java development unveiled at OpenWorld 2008 23 Sep 2008

IBM boosts information management range

New releases will address every stage of the application lifecycle 28 Oct 2008

related whitepapers

today's top stories

IT's stock is soaring at the LSE

London Stock Exchange IT chief David Lester explains to Angelica Mari how the integration of Borsa Italiana is keeping his team busy, despite the worsening economy 20 Nov 2008

Keeping IT in fashion

John Bovill has been hooked on retail since his early years as a fashion market trader. His industry knowledge is now helping him build a slick IT operation, reports Charlotte Moore 20 Nov 2008

Cutting-edge IT delivers the goods

Chief technology officer Jay Bregman explains how constant innovation is part and parcel of his strategy for delivering competitive advantage at eCourier 20 Nov 2008

Computing podcast: Europol's data sharing woes; credit card protection at Cotton Traders

The pan-European fight against organised crime is undermined by lax data sharing arrangements; and Cotton Traders enhances its credit card protection 20 Nov 2008

Keeping IT on track

Catherine Doran, winner of Computing’s IT Leader of the Year award, tells Angelica Mari of her determination to drive on with technology-led transformation at Network Rail despite uncertainty over funding 19 Nov 2008

Advertisement

Newsletter signup

Sign up for our range of FREE newsletters:

Existing User

Newsletter user login:

Advertisement

Jobs

Related jobs

Job of the week

Job alerts

Sign up here

Find your next job

IT Salary Checker

Check salary here

Advertisement

White papers

Search white papers

Top categories

VPN, Extranet and Intranet Solutions

WAN/ LAN Solutions

Network Security

Interoperability-Connectivity

Grid/ Utility Computing

Latest poll

Will attempts to rebrand IT as a "cool" choice of profession increase the number of IT graduates?

Will attempts to rebrand IT as a "cool" choice of profession increase the number of IT graduates?

Can brand building reverse a decline in IT graduate numbers?

Previous poll results

Latest audio and video articles

Video

The definitive guide to converged communications

Five key trends and five best practice tips to help you improve your corporate communications 20 Nov 2008

PodcastAudio

Computing podcast: Europol's data sharing woes; credit card protection at Cotton Traders

The pan-European fight against organised crime is undermined by lax data sharing arrangements; and Cotton Traders enhances its credit card protection 20 Nov 2008

Latest in-depth articles

StarFeatures

Retaining the stars of IT

Jim Mortleman investigates the innovative techniques IT leaders are using to hang on to their star performers 20 Nov 2008

Dave BaileyComment

Clouds darken outlook for Vista's successor

Windows 7 looks like being an improvement on Vista, but economic and environmental concerns may mean few enterprises will rush to adopt it 20 Nov 2008

Advertisement

Primary Navigation