Oracle AI World 2025: Oracle Shifts Thinking from Technology to Outcomes; Plans Updated APEX Low-Code
Summary Bullets:
• Oracle shifts pitch from technology to outcomes, driven by AI-injected tools.
• Oracle APEXLang, slated for 2026, to modernize Oracle’s development practices.
Last week’s Oracle AI World couldn’t have been timelier, attended by customers and partners still buzzing from a corporate earnings report, which triggered the tech giant’s stock to soar based on its mounting investments in AI and cloud infrastructure.
Executive Chairman and CTO Larry Ellison’s high-level keynote speech included profound possibilities and some examples of a variety of outcomes that AI advancements can have on global enterprises. Executives continued to carry his message in other keynotes, noting the company’s shift in focus from CIOs to CEOs through conversations that emphasized outcomes versus products. For example, in one case, Oracle’s ability to apply AI-injected applications, app platforms, and data platforms to a particular healthcare clinic resulted in productivity gains, which saved individual health workers 100 minutes per day.
He and other executives further described situations involving various medical diagnostic imaging and genetic testing with examples of how AI will diagnose, treat, and cure health issues at significantly greater levels and speeds through modernized code bases, medical systems, and ecosystems.
Oracle announced new functionality across Oracle Cloud Infrastructure’s (OCI) comprehensive cloud offering, spanning its developer portfolio: AI Agent Studio, Fusion AI Agent Marketplace, and Agent Hub (preview) AI tools for business users. Oracle’s AI agent studio has been enhanced to build and deploy AI agents across the enterprise including Oracle Fusion Applications. Oracle’s new AI agent marketplace extends the company’s LLM ecosystem and third-party agent-building resources. Ellison noted that Oracle’s low-code and automation technology, Oracle Application Express (APEX), will continue to demonstrate a growing role in AI code generation of applications connected through workflows and shored up by security. Advancements will make applications developed more scalable and reliable. This led to other application development discussions throughout the week, including some on the future of Oracle APEX.
A little-known app development tool, Oracle APEXLang, shows promise in modernizing and extending Oracle’s current development practices. Set for 2026 release, the Apex extension uses a structured, file-based format to build and format Oracle APEX applications, specifically to enable app development to be integrated with enterprises’ latest digitization practices.
Oracle APEX, traditionally used in a browser-based, declarative environment over the past five years, is valued by enterprise developers for its low-code cloud service advantage, traditionally used to build apps on Oracle databases. Oracle APEXLang represents a significant shift for these traditional developers. Features include version control support (e.g., Git) and tools to adhere to CICD pipelines for improved automated test and deployment. It works with developers’ app platforms of choice including code assistants, because the new file-based approach is particularly well suited for GenAI and LLMs. Oracle research notes Oracle APEXLang is not a replacement for Oracle APEX, SQL, or JavaScript, but an enabler for defining components of applications.
