If You Can’t Beat Them: Oracle Cloud Infrastructure Joins with Azure AI, OpenAI, Google Cloud

Adding partnerships with two of the top 3 cloud providers can only strengthen OCI.
June 20, 2024
5 min read

Image: Oracle Cloud regions, per the OCI Blog

According to Synergy Research group, total global cloud revenue in Q3 2023 was over $73 billion, with the top three providers, AWS, Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud taking the lion’s share of that revenue (66%).

Oracle Cloud Infrastructure (OCI) -- which, depending on which analyst you ask, ranks either fourth, fifth, or sixth overall among providers -- accounted for only a 2% share of the market; yet that number still translates to $1.5 billion in revenue in that quarter.

Extrapolate that out across four quarters and OCI represents more than 10% of Oracle’s $49.95 billion in reported revenue for 2023.

That's why it came as no surprise when, in the company's earnings call for the fiscal Third Quarter of 2024, Oracle CEO Safra Catz revealed that OCI is looking at about $10 billion in capex investment through 2025.

That investment will be used for purposes of new data center construction and expansion of existing data centers, with plans to build 100 new facilities while expanding capacity 66 existing data centers, as previously reported by Globe Street and Datacenter Dynamics.

Oracle's Chief Technology Officer and Executive Chairman Larry Ellison upped the ante even further during his company's latest earnings call last week, declaring, "We are working toward a future where every one of Oracle’s customers could, if it wanted to, have its own Oracle Cloud data center inside that customer’s data center."

OCI Rising to Meet AI Road

When Nvidia made their Grace Hopper AI announcements in March of 2023, they also announced that the lead hyperscaler to offer their DGX Cloud would be OCI.

OCI offers a full range of Nvidia AI processors, for both bare metal and VM compute as both GPU instances, using the Nvidia A10 Tensor Core GPU, GH 200 Grace Hopper Superchip and GBNVL72 to enable AI inferencing and training.

OCI also offers their Supercluster GPU instances, which is bare metal compute using Nvidia A100, H100, H200 and B200 Tensor Core GPUs with the capability to scale up to 32, 768 GPUs.

This is a lot of AI horsepower -- so the announcement on June 11th that Open AI had selected OCI to extend its Microsoft Azure AI platform made a great deal of sense. As noted by DCD's Georgia Butler, "The move will increase OpenAI's capacity for training its large language model."

Sam Altman, Chief Executive Officer, OpenAI, said, "We are delighted to be working with Microsoft and Oracle. OCI will extend Azure's platform and enable OpenAI to continue to scale."

It should be noted that while Microsoft owns 49% of OpenAI, they reportedly do not exert any operational control over the generative AI pioneer.

The OCI AI infrastructure is purpose-built for building and training AI models, enabling cloud customers to work quickly anywhere within Oracle's distributed cloud.

Oracle's Chairman and CTO Ellison commented, "The race to build the world's greatest large language model is on, and it is fueling unlimited demand for Oracle's Gen2 AI infrastructure." 

Pointing out that that there are thousands of AI users across multiple industries already using OCI AI, Ellison added, “Leaders like OpenAI are choosing OCI because it is the world's fastest and most cost-effective AI infrastructure."

OCI Also Partners with #3 Hyperscaler Google

Also on June 11th, OCI announced a “groundbreaking multicloud partnership” with Google Cloud, the world's number three ranked hyperscaler. The announcement entailed two new products, both of which are designed to allow customers of Oracle and Google to make use of leading technologies from both providers. 

The first product will be the Google Cloud Cross Cloud Interconnect. This will enable customers to take their general-purpose workloads across both clouds with no cross-cloud interconnect charges.

Oracle's Ellison said, "Customers want the flexibility to use multiple clouds. To meet this growing demand, Google and Oracle are seamlessly connecting Google Cloud services with the very latest Oracle Database technology. By putting Oracle Cloud Infrastructure hardware in Google Cloud datacenters, customers can benefit from the best possible database and network performance." 

Later in 2024, customers will gain access to the highest levels of Oracle database and networking performance with the Oracle Database@Google Cloud. This will be the Oracle cloud infrastructure deployed to Google Cloud data centers.

Said Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and Alphabet,  "Oracle and Google Cloud have many joint enterprise customers. This new partnership will help these customers use Oracle database and applications in concert with Google Cloud's innovative platform and AI capabilities."

Per Synergy Research, Google, while the third ranked hyperscaler in terms of revenue, had only one third the market share of industry leader AWS and less than half the market share of Microsoft Azure.

Therefore, a partnership that could bring OCI customers into the Google environment is a solid win, while OCI being able to take advantage of the global scale of Google data centers would seem to bring significant cost-savings to OCI as they expand their footprint and availability.

 

Reporting on June 12, Yahoo Finance noted that Oracle (ORCL) shares were rising after the company announced cloud deals with Google and OpenAI.

 

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About the Author

David Chernicoff

David Chernicoff

David Chernicoff is an experienced technologist and editorial content creator with the ability to see the connections between technology and business while figuring out how to get the most from both and to explain the needs of business to IT and IT to business.

Matt Vincent

Matt Vincent is Editor in Chief of Data Center Frontier, where he leads editorial strategy and coverage focused on the infrastructure powering cloud computing, artificial intelligence, and the digital economy. A veteran B2B technology journalist with more than two decades of experience, Vincent specializes in the intersection of data centers, power, cooling, and emerging AI-era infrastructure. Since assuming the EIC role in 2023, he has helped guide Data Center Frontier’s coverage of the industry’s transition into the gigawatt-scale AI era, with a focus on hyperscale development, behind-the-meter power strategies, liquid cooling architectures, and the evolving energy demands of high-density compute, while working closely with the Digital Infrastructure Group at Endeavor Business Media to expand the brand’s analytical and multimedia footprint. Vincent also hosts The Data Center Frontier Show podcast, where he interviews industry leaders across hyperscale, colocation, utilities, and the data center supply chain to examine the technologies and business models reshaping digital infrastructure. Since its inception he serves as Head of Content for the Data Center Frontier Trends Summit. Before becoming Editor in Chief, he served in multiple senior editorial roles across Endeavor Business Media’s digital infrastructure portfolio, with coverage spanning data centers and hyperscale infrastructure, structured cabling and networking, telecom and datacom, IP physical security, and wireless and Pro AV markets. He began his career in 2005 within PennWell’s Advanced Technology Division and later held senior editorial positions supporting brands such as Cabling Installation & Maintenance, Lightwave Online, Broadband Technology Report, and Smart Buildings Technology. Vincent is a frequent moderator, interviewer, and keynote speaker at industry events including the HPC Forum, where he delivers forward-looking analysis on how AI and high-performance computing are reshaping digital infrastructure. He graduated with honors from Indiana University Bloomington with a B.A. in English Literature and Creative Writing and lives in southern New Hampshire with his family, remaining an active musician in his spare time.

You can connect with Matt via LinkedIn or email.

You can connect with Matt via LinkedIn or email.

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