Oracle 9i For Windows 8 64 Bit
Dec 9, 2014 - Prepare the server; Install the Oracle software and create a starter database. However, if you are running the 64 bit version of Solaris 8, you. ODBC driver for Oracle supports both x86 and x64 versions of the following Oracle Clients: 12c, 11g, 10g, 9i, 8i, 8.0. Note that support for x64 versions of Oracle Clients is available for 64-bit.
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We have oracle related applications and they are working fine in Winxp, Our company is planing to upgrade from winxp to window 8.1 pro 64bit but the problem we are facing is that Oracle related files are not opening in window 8.1 pro 64bit, they are opening in administrator profile, and also not configure 'net manager' in oracle database services not connect to server they are not opening in Users profiles, is there any setting need to modify in group policy? We can't give full rights to users, Please help me in this regards Regards.
Oracle 9i won't install on Windows 7 or Vista - especially if its 64-bit. It's not compatible and will fail the pre-req checks every time.
You have to go to at least 10g to get Oracle to install on Windows 7. I have heard of some people hacking the installer to get it to work, but I'm not going to recommend it, as you won't have support and you'll run into more problems than you solve. Also, don't use this as a production system. IMHO, it is a huge mistake to try and run a production instance on a workstation OS like Windows XP or Windows 7. It is worth it to get good hardware and a server OS. If you absolutely need to use Oracle 9i (though, as others have pointed out, you should go with 10g at the very least, if not 11g), and you have the Windows 7 Professional version (not Home edition), you can download & install from Microsoft the following two programs: Virtual PC and Windows XP Mode (there is also an update to Windows XP Mode to download and install).
Install Virtual PC, then Windows XP Mode and the update. This will then create a virtual PC on your Windows 7 system, allowing you to open and install Oracle 9i (or 10g) inside that virtual PC. I recently did this for a different program that was not Windows 7 compatible (and I didn't want to pay $100/year to get the newest version, for something I use once a week or so), and it works great. I would think Oracle would run fine in that environment as well, as it simulates a real Windows XP Pro system.