At the OBIEE 11g Launch in London
July 7th, 2010 by Mark Rittman
Today was the launch of OBIEE 11g at Old Billingsgate, in London. I guess most readers of this blog, along with us, having been looking forward to this release for months, if not years, and so it was good to finally have the product announced and for customers to get a look at the new features in more detail.
The morning started off for us around 8.30am, as Rittman Mead had a partner booth in the main exhibition area. There were around ten or so partners exhibiting, and around six hundred or so attendees, including a lot of people from the States as their event isn’t until later in July. The main session itself started at 10am with an introduction by Oracle’s Andrew Sutherland and David Callaghan, and then Charles Phillips came on to set the scene.

The main detail of the launch came with Thomas Kurian’s session, where we were given a tour of the technology and thinking behind 11g, with the main themes being integration, enterprise, storage-to-scorecard and leveraging of technologies such as Essbase and Exadata.

To be honest, as long-term beta testers none of this was news to us, but it’s good to see the product finally launched and to hear the positive feedback from the attendees. Particularly impressive were the demos all performed by Paul Rodwick, as there was a lot of technology to show, a lot of demo steps to memorize, and (apart from a small glitch with BI Publisher) all going perfectly to plan. Well done to the Oracle team, and to Paul, for everything running smoothly.

After the main sessions were a number of breakout sessions around OLAP integration, systems management, scorecard and so on. I went to the OLAP one but then went back to the booth to speak to some people, but then went back at the end for the partner-only session where I was on the panel with Roger Cressey (Qubix, Hyperion) and Mike Pell (Oracle).
So, we’re now at the point where OBIEE 11g is launched, but it’ll be several weeks before the software is available for download on OTN. In the meantime, starting from tomorrow we’ll be posting a number of articles on the blog going into more detail on some of the key features, including enhancements to the RPD, the role of WebLogic, better support for Essbase and other features.
We’re also launching a number of new services, training courses and upgrade offers around the OBIEE 11g launch. We’ll be posting more details soon, but in the meantime be sure to bookmark our OBIEE 11g Resource Centre page, and also take a look at our two datasheets on OBIEE 11g services and our new updated OBIEE 11g course catalogue.
- Rittman Mead OBIEE 11g Services, Training and Support
- Rittman Mead Training Catalogue, Updated for OBIEE 11g
If you’re interested in more details from Oracle, check out the Oracle BIEE 11g launch microsite, where you’ll find additional collateral and white papers, a webcast of the event, demos, and a video featuring our own Borkur Steingrimsson talking about the systems management features in 11g.
Finally, keep an eye on this site for an announcement next week around our upcoming OBIEE 11g Training Days event in the UK and USA, where we’ll be taking you, fresh from the beta, through hands-on sessions on 11g led by myself and our team. This will be a highly-technical session for those already skilled in the 10g release of OBIEE, with limited availability (no more than 30 attendees at each session), and if you’re interested and want to register your interest in advance, drop me an email at mark.rittman@rittmanmead.com.


July 9th, 2010 at 8:36 am
Hi Mark,
As we know that previous version of OBIEE was a 32 bit application. Is OBIEE11g a 64 bit application.
Thanks,
Pankaj.
July 9th, 2010 at 8:46 am
@Pankaj Well from what I remember, 10g was 64-bit on a couple of platforms (AIX?) but as you say, 32-bit on Windows, Linux etc. I don’t know if this changes for 11g, the presentation at the launch suggested 64-bit everywhere, but there were no specific details on individual platforms – so we’ll need to wait until GA to find out.
July 11th, 2010 at 6:22 am
Mark, as per my knowledge the OBIEE10g was supported on 64 OS version, however the application was itself a 32 bit application, due to which it was not able to utilize more then 4 GB ( 2^32 ). So even if we have more then 4 GB of RAM at server the OBIEE10g will use only up to 4 GB. A 64 application will be able to utilize more memory (2^64).
July 11th, 2010 at 7:59 am
@Pankaj – As far as i know, in BI EE 10g, the 64 bit support was more of a 32 bit platform ported to work with 64 bit O/S. The 64 bit version of the software is available on AIX, Solaris & Windows. But i have heard differing versions even within Oracle. Looking at this benchmark http://www.oracle.com/us/products/middleware/bus-int/064336.pdf , i am wondering whether the 64bit version of BI EE is indeed a native port as against an emulated port. Its hard to say unless it is clearly stated in the SRSP. But moving to 64 bit O/S(with supported BI EE 64 bit install) in 10g surely has benefits when compared to the 32 bit O/S. I am assuming 11g will have native 64 bit port, atleast thats what i have heard so far.
July 12th, 2010 at 1:35 am
Mark,
Thanks for bringing us the coverage. I was on a vacation but knew that at least I can count on this blog for the details of the launch. I am glad that I was right.
July 16th, 2010 at 12:13 pm
Hi Mark,
From where we can ge OBIEE 11g Beta version to download
July 16th, 2010 at 6:29 pm
@Sunil
My understanding is that the beta program is closed now. But the software should be available to download from OTN in a few weeks time.
Mark
July 29th, 2010 at 2:44 pm
hi Mark
is OBIEE 11G able to connect to AW 10 G stored in Database 11G ?
July 29th, 2010 at 4:38 pm
@Jean Marc
Yes, it’d connect the same way that OBIEE 10g does to an Oracle 10g Analytic Workspace – through views that you create over the AW, either manually or through the plug-ins to Analytic Workspace Manager 11g.
regards
Mark
August 3rd, 2010 at 11:39 am
@Mark n Venkat,
I opened an SR with Oracle about OBIEE on windows platform .. they have conformed that OBIEE10g is 32 bit appication, while the OBIEE 11g also has 64 bit variant.
Desparately waiting for it to awailable for download
August 3rd, 2010 at 11:47 am
however SR support guy also had a hard time to figure that out and give tha conformation abt the 32 bit and 64 bit version of OBIEE.
August 17th, 2010 at 12:09 pm
Great.. OBIEE unified framework is perfect.