I am likely to be proved wrong. Last year I blogged that the next major version of Oracle might be version 13. It is not an unreasonable assumption. I started using Oracle with 8i, then 9i, 10g, 11g, and now 12c. There is a pattern here isn’t there? The number 13 is next isn’t it?
Of course the next major version number won’t be 13. What was I thinking and how dare I think logically!
Why? Enter the Marketing Department – “What, you want to next version of Oracle to be 13, the unlucky number!“
A conversation on oracle-l today noted that the version number for SQL Developer and SQLcl (not the RDBMS, so there is a little wriggle room left for me yet) jumped to version 17. At a guess, the 17 from 2017 (two digit years, again; what can possibly go wrong – no problems ever before). Aah, so version 17 and not any other number makes a bit more sense now. Sort of.
No Oracle 13 now? It’s obvious now that 13 as an unlucky number has been pointed out isn’t it? Well no – here is Oracle 13, but it’s not the database 🙁 This is getting quite confusing. It is like Java JDK/JRE version numbering nightmare all over again.
Java 1.0.x, 1.1.x referred to as Java 1.0 and 1.1
Java 1.2.x, 1.3.x, 1.4.x all referred to as Java 2
Java 1.5.0 referred to as Java 2 version 5.0
and recent Java versions have their own Wikipedia page
My recollection of Java versions above may even be wrong. Who cares? I don’t. All I know is that it a mess.
The next number in the series 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 should be 13. My 10 year old knows this too. If 13 isn’t the next number in the series, I will fail the maths tests, the psychometric tests, and the Mensa test too. And so will you!
— Published by Mike, 21:16 14 July 2017 (CET)
ps, my crystal ball was correct. The new version numbering includes a build number. I suggested this for Oracle in my prior post. At least I wasn’t 100% wrong.
By Month: November 2022, October 2022, August 2022, February 2021, January 2021, December 2020, November 2020, March 2019, September 2018, June 2018, May 2018, April 2018
Apple, C#, Databases, Faircom, General IT Rant, German, Informatics, LINQ, MongoDB, Oracle, Perl, PostgreSQL, SQL, SQL Server, Unit Testing, XML/XSLT
Leave a Reply