Oracle Changes Certification Requirements 40
micromoog writes "Oracle announced today that all new candidates for the Oracle Certified Professional certification must now pass an instructor-led course in addition to passing the four exams previously required. They claim demand from the industry for hands-on experience; however, this move will bring Oracle an extra $2000/class for physical classes, or $1500/class for online classes. Previously, someone with knowledge of Oracle could get certified for nothing more than the cost of the four exams ($500 total). There was no warning or grace period. This seems to me like a simple cash grab on a captive audience."
No kidding... (Score:2, Insightful)
This seems to me like a simple cash grab on a captive audience.
No kidding. It's always been a cash grab, the only difference is that Oracle has raised the price from $500 to $2000.
Money Making For Oracle (Score:1)
Oracle feels vulnerable. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Oracle feels vulnerable. (Score:2)
Several years ago I would have considered Oracle for our middle sized projects - now were a PostregSQL shop for everyting. We dodn't do large projects where Oracle really shines.
Of course YMMV.
Okay, so that's why. (Score:1)
Re:Oracle feels vulnerable. (Score:4, Insightful)
I got into the field and couldn't fix a damn thing. Why? cuz I understood the theory and the math, which were standardized tests, but Couldn't turn that into the knowledge of "If the light blinks wrong and the direction points consistently 15 degrees west of where it should, what's wrong with the 'capacitive tachometer'?"
A human instructor could have spotted my theory-to-practice problems with hardware. I'm all digital and software now, damn good at it, but The USAF's standardized tests miss read me.
You have got to be kidding. (Score:2, Interesting)
Take the number of exams times the number of people that get cets. It is a drop in the bucket. I would even guess that the total gross, no net, of this will be less than one oracle install and licence for a 4 processor machine.
Money grab please...I think it is more about making sure it is not a book worm that has the cert and that they have "proven" hands on exp with the program. Sometimes I think Slashdot is nothing more than on big troll fest by the editors....you got me.
Oracle Certification bundle. (Score:1)
Find other alternatives (Score:3, Interesting)
Lastly, given the unadulterated abuse and torture they've put SQL through, I've given up on them. They are no longer an SQL database.
I kind of welcome this (Score:2, Insightful)
Flame away.
Re:I kind of welcome this (Score:2)
But... But... MCSEs are worth more than degrees if you work in software! The slashbots told me so in that other thread a few weeks ago!
Re:I kind of welcome this (Score:1)
though this doesnt mean that the oracle stuff is stricter. i have my ocp and it wasnt easy.
This is kinda stupid... (Score:1)
I really have to check if they did already did impose this requirement in Hong Kong....
Else I probably earn an OCP ASAP~
$2000 is nothing (Score:2, Insightful)
I know my employer would put up the cash for me, if it made sense and I wanted it.
-Pete
Re:$2000 is nothing (Score:1)
For me as an independant contractor however it is most definitely not, especially, since I can get the product to play around (not for production use of course) virtually for free.
I can understand, why one would want to raise the bar for getting certified. The bar however should be within the exams and not via the price.
So if I want to get certified I am forced to sit for three days into a class, that likely bores the living shit out of me plus I can't bill any customers for this time.
Having actually teached system administration and performance & tuning classes for an enterprise database product (which was not Oracle though, but relational databases are conceptually rather comparable) it's a pretty safe bet, that this is a complete waste of time for my specific case.
But then I don't really care: Certification might look good on paper. I have never really had a need to prove my knowledge to a customer with a crappy piece of (overprized) paper.
Welcome... (Score:1)
Yep. Welcome to the company store. Welcome to the company town. This is a non-union shop. Here are your (admittedly golden) shackles.