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Larry Ellison: The Man Who Briefly Overtook Elon Musk: The Oracle Founder Who Never Wanted to Be Famous
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Larry Ellison: The Man Who Briefly Overtook Elon Musk: The Oracle Founder Who Never Wanted to Be Famous
By None
Current price: $6.99


By None
Larry Ellison: The Man Who Briefly Overtook Elon Musk: The Oracle Founder Who Never Wanted to Be Famous
Current price: $6.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Indigo
Larry Ellison is one of the most powerful figures in modern technology—and one of the least interested in public admiration.
This book offers a narrative and strategic portrait of the Oracle founder, tracing how a self-taught outsider built one of the most influential enterprise software empires in history. Rather than following a traditional biographical path, it focuses on the pivotal moments that reveal how power is constructed, defended, and reinvented inside Silicon Valley.
Through Ellison's rise, the story explores relentless competition with giants like IBM and Microsoft, Oracle's aggressive positioning, and its ability to survive and dominate successive technological waves—from databases to enterprise applications, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence. Each stage becomes a lens for analyzing ambition, leadership style, control of systems, and long-term strategic thinking.
The book also examines the contradictions that define Ellison: intensely private yet unapologetically dominant; dismissive of fame, yet briefly crowned the world's richest person in 2025. These tensions illuminate a model of influence built not on celebrity, but on infrastructure, leverage, and institutional control.
More than a biography, this is an exploration of how durable power operates in the technology industry. It shows why some figures shape entire markets without becoming public icons—and what their stories reveal about ambition, legacy, and the architecture of modern capitalism.
Larry Ellison is one of the most powerful figures in modern technology—and one of the least interested in public admiration.
This book offers a narrative and strategic portrait of the Oracle founder, tracing how a self-taught outsider built one of the most influential enterprise software empires in history. Rather than following a traditional biographical path, it focuses on the pivotal moments that reveal how power is constructed, defended, and reinvented inside Silicon Valley.
Through Ellison's rise, the story explores relentless competition with giants like IBM and Microsoft, Oracle's aggressive positioning, and its ability to survive and dominate successive technological waves—from databases to enterprise applications, cloud computing, and artificial intelligence. Each stage becomes a lens for analyzing ambition, leadership style, control of systems, and long-term strategic thinking.
The book also examines the contradictions that define Ellison: intensely private yet unapologetically dominant; dismissive of fame, yet briefly crowned the world's richest person in 2025. These tensions illuminate a model of influence built not on celebrity, but on infrastructure, leverage, and institutional control.
More than a biography, this is an exploration of how durable power operates in the technology industry. It shows why some figures shape entire markets without becoming public icons—and what their stories reveal about ambition, legacy, and the architecture of modern capitalism.


















