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From: Sybrand Bakker on 20 Mar 2010 08:03 On Fri, 19 Mar 2010 20:11:17 +0000 (UTC), Mladen Gogala <no(a)email.here.invalid> wrote: >Does anybody have an inkling when will Oracle release a proper patchset >that I can justify for my management? This situation is infuriating. If you are so dissatisfied with Oracle you have two valid choices 1) address your rants at an appropiate place, which is at Oracle, not here 2) switch to one of the free Mickey Mouse databases you consider as so much better. ------ Sybrand Bakker Senior Oracle DBA
From: Noons on 20 Mar 2010 08:25 Mladen Gogala wrote,on my timestamp of 20/03/2010 7:11 AM: > Does anybody have an inkling when will Oracle release a proper patchset > that I can justify for my management? This situation is infuriating. > > > got fed-up with waiting for it. we're going 11r1 this year. (if we can get the BI and Peoplesoft s/w upgraded correspondingly...)
From: Mladen Gogala on 20 Mar 2010 18:45 On Sat, 20 Mar 2010 13:03:10 +0100, Sybrand Bakker wrote: >>Does anybody have an inkling when will Oracle release a proper patchset >>that I can justify for my management? This situation is infuriating. > > If you are so dissatisfied with Oracle you have two valid choices > > 1) address your rants at an appropiate place, which is at Oracle, not > here Sybrand, you missed the question mark at the end of the sentence. Question marks usually mean that the sentence ended by one is a question. I wasn't "expressing dissatisfaction", I was asking a question. You don't have to thank me for this little lesson in English language. The phrase "thank you" is completely out of character for you. As I've said before, I would describe you by a word starting with "a" and ending in "le", like "adaptable". -- http://mgogala.freehostia.com
From: John Hurley on 21 Mar 2010 07:19
On Mar 20, 6:45 pm, Mladen Gogala <gogala.mla...(a)gmail.com> wrote: snip > Question marks usually mean that the sentence ended by one is a question. > I wasn't "expressing dissatisfaction", I was asking a question. You don't > have to thank me for this little lesson in English language. The phrase > "thank you" is completely out of character for you. As I've said before, > I would describe you by a word starting with "a" and ending in "le", like > "adaptable". I thought you were asking for an American lesson just the other day and now you are teaching? |