You could if you had the money to pay for it.
No.
Yes, Oracle acquired Sun Microsystems on January 27, 2010
To my knowledge, yes. You didn't ask if it would be a good idea. If you had, I would say maybe not. The Oracle database includes its own web server, which possibly could conflict with the IIS web server (which is what IIS is).
Go to Oracle's webpage for a free download of Oracle 10g for Windows 7, and every other software need you have from Oracle! Oracle will help solve all your software needs!
Google don't use Oracle or MySQL, they use their own database software known as Bigtable.
There were lots of oracles, but the most famous was at Delphi, where in a cave among the rocks the Pythoness (a sort of medium) would go into a trance and make prophecies. It's possible that fumes from volcanic vents (most of Greece is an earthquake zone) assisted the process. The delphic oracle was famous for prophecies that could be taken either way - as in, 'if you go to war, you will destroy a great empire' - which might, of course, turn out to be your own.
ask them to what does thy seek the oppisite to thine command. is this what you would have done on to your own brother or sister or own child is what you seek this?
No. That person would need to establish their own legal connection, and yours, to the child in order to be entitled to seek child support.No. That person would need to establish their own legal connection, and yours, to the child in order to be entitled to seek child support.No. That person would need to establish their own legal connection, and yours, to the child in order to be entitled to seek child support.No. That person would need to establish their own legal connection, and yours, to the child in order to be entitled to seek child support.
King Croesus of Lydia sought guidance from the Oracle of Delphi regarding an impending war with Persia. The oracle famously told him that if he went to war, he would "destroy a great empire." Croesus interpreted this as a favorable prophecy, believing he would triumph over Persia, but ultimately, it was his own empire that was destroyed in the conflict. The message served as a cautionary tale about misinterpretation and the unforeseen consequences of one's actions.
The oracle at Delphi prophesied to King Laius that he would be killed by his own son. In a bid to prevent this fate, Laius and his wife, Jocasta, abandoned their newborn son, Oedipus, on a mountainside. However, the prophecy ultimately came true when Oedipus, unaware of his true parentage, later killed Laius in a confrontation, fulfilling the oracle's prediction.
Socrates used the story of the Oracle of Delphi to demonstrate that his wisdom came from recognizing his own ignorance. The oracle proclaimed Socrates as the wisest man, but Socrates interpreted this as a call to seek knowledge through questioning and self-reflection rather than claiming to know everything.
The oracle at Delphi declared that Socrates was the wisest man in Athens. Socrates responded by interpreting this as a call to question and challenge his own and others' knowledge, believing that true wisdom comes from acknowledging one's own ignorance.