Oracle buys Net4Call
Oracle has bought Net4Call, a Norwegian
company specialising in the Parlay gateway market, as part of its
ongoing effort to productise telecoms service delivery platforms (SDPs).
This acquisition complements Oracle's service delivery
strategy in the network mediation space. Following its acquisitions of Portal
Software and of Hotsip, Oracle is now able to offer a'productised' SDP
and an end-to-end portfolio.
SDP is currently a buzzword in the industry. It basically
means the IT 'plumbing' that enables abstract service provisioning and
effective independence from network equipment, in order to a) enable easier
service development capabilities and b) enable provisioning of third-party
services throughout the SDP in service providers' IT environments.
Over the past few years, many service providers have taken
holistic approaches to designing SDPs and selecting the corresponding pieces of
software that act as enablers for them. Some vendors have developed a
comprehensive approach to this market, the most prominent in the IT area being
IBM and Microsoft. With this acquisition, Oracle complements its software
portfolio and is now able to address virtually all the SDP components with its
own software building blocks. SDP is something worth productising, as the market
is potentially worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
So far, the opportunities have been more about driving
revenues at an SI level than at a software level, as service providers deploying
these IT environments have been specifying them from A to Z. This is due to the
heterogeneity of service providers' network and billing mediation requirements.
Will Oracle be able to productise all this in an integrated software portfolio,
and will service providers follow that path in designing their solutions? If so,
it would mean a dramatic change for the industry.
Jean-Charles leads Ovum's Service Infrastructure
research practice, which focuses on the applications market that enables service
provisioning in the telecoms space. His responsibilities include managing and
providing guidance to the Service Infrastructure team, as well as delivering
research and engagements on the service infrastructure markets.
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