About House of Brick
House of Brick provides cutting-edge software innovation and industry-leading consulting experience to help navigate the most challenging cloud migration and operational challenges.
Oracle License & Audit Risk
Oracle Audits – Everything You Should Know
Oracle Audit Defense
Oracle Cost Optimization
Oracle License Optimization on VMware
Oracle Database Security
Cloud Services & Modernization
Cloud Migration
Cloud Modernization
AWS Oracle Database
AWS Oracle Licensing
Running Oracle on AWS
License & Compliance Management
Oracle License Management
Security & Compliance Assessment
VMware Cost Optimization Assessment
High Availability & Disaster Recovery
Infrastructure Design & Validation
Integration
Optimization
Performance Tuning
Managed Consulting Services Overview
House of Brick provides cutting-edge software innovation and industry-leading consulting experience to help navigate the most challenging cloud migration and operational challenges.

Updated on 2-16-24 by Nathan Biggs (@nathanbiggs), CEO I wrote the blog post below five years ago. I am amazed at how prescient those recommendations
Dave Welch (@OraVBCA), CTO & Chief Evangelist New Class Action Filings Against Oracle’s Executive Leadership There are two recent and related class action lawsuits against

Pam Fulmer, Partner, Fulmer Ware LLP This is a guest blog post written by Pam Fulmer, a partner at Fulmer Ware LLP based in San Francisco.
Do you need to license your Oracle DR site? It depends. Learn how Data Guard, the 10-day rule, and backup replication affect your Oracle licensing obligations.
Dave Welch (@OraVBCA), CTO and Chief Evangelist House of Brick has become the industry’s lightning rod on the topic of licensing Oracle technology running on

Nathan Biggs (@nathanbiggs), CEO I have been meeting with customers all around the world recently and talking commiserating with them about their experiences dealing with
Nathan Biggs (@nathanbiggs ), CEO We thought that a great way to end the year would be to publish our top 3 most popular blog