The short, short version
In the interest of trying to make up for several weeks of lost blogs, I'm going to give the short, short version...
- Tucson: Nice town, rather flat, lots of good looking women, slower pace of life.
- New Ford Mustang rental: Crappy car to drive, but sure does look nice on the outside.
- Software licensing: Sucks. Oracle sucks more than most.
- Dual-core CPUs: They rock, but not enough to counter Oracle's Micro$oft-like licensing.
- Watching 100+ doctors, physician assistants, and technicians graduate: impressive.
- Watching my wife win an academic award for being one of the top four students in her P.A. class, at the number two program in the country: one of my proudest moments ever.


2 Comments:
You've been busy! Tell Jen I said Congratulations - that's awesome!
Meg
By
Meg W, at 6:08 PM
Oracle to Pay $8M to Settle Suit over Training Fees
By Lisa Vaas
May 16, 2005
Oracle Corp. will pay the federal government $8 million to settle a whistle-blower suit that charged the company with overbilling
for software training. According to a statement issued on Friday by the United States Attorney's office for the District of
Massachusetts, the suit was set in motion by a whistle-blower who was once vice president of North American Sales for Oracle University. The whistle-blower will receive $1.58 million of the total settlement amount. In the case against the Redwood Shores, Calif., database company, the United States alleged that Oracle submitted false claims for payment from 1997 through 2003. The charges were billed to various government agencies, according to the statement, and related to a contract between Oracle and the General Services Administration. Specifically, Oracle was charged with billing to and collecting from the government in advance of providing training; of "expiring" (i.e., forfeiting to Oracle) millions of dollars paid in advance for training services that weren't used within a one-year period; and failing to comply with Federal Travel Regulations in billing the federal government for travel and expenses. Although the government's statement did not disclose which federal agencies were overbilled, it did list those that sent agents to investigate: the GSA's Office of Inspector General; the FBI; the Defense Criminal Investigative Service; the Department of the Air Force's Office of Special Investigations; the Department of the Army's Criminal Investigation Command; the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Office of Inspector General; and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service.
Oracle Can Kiss My Ass
By
Anonymous, at 9:29 PM
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