Marion's Weblog
My name is Marion Vermazen. I worked at Sun Microsystems up until June 3, 2005. I worked on the IT aspects of Sun's work from anywhere program, iWork. I was also the team lead for the Java Desktop and Solaris 10 at Sun Change Acceptance team.

20050208 Tuesday February 08, 2005

Office as a service

James Governor is one of the founders of RedMonk, a small industry analyst firm. His Feb 4 blog entry reflecting on what he heard at Sun's recent analyst conference about the Sun's drive into grid and service management was thought provoking. He ends by asking "Why am I so bullish on services and service oriented economics? They seem to have momentum; they are winning in the market. ...... Service management is a notion I subscribe to. Service Oriented Economics will underpin the successful business models of the next few years, ..... Sun is getting ready."

The blog entry was thought provoking because it got me thinking about Openwork, Sun's consulting offering to share our experiences and learnings from the internal work infrastructure program we call iWork. James says "Sometimes it seems like Mr. Schwartz doesn't believe anyone should own things at all, except service providers that is, who should build the infrastructure for us. Rent your house don't buy it... Actually Jonathan would probably rethink house market economics entirely, de bono style. Talk to cable companies and suggest they offer free accommodation in some remote (cheap) corner of the world as part of multimedia services offering--TV, broadband, wifi subscription, music downloads and phone. You get a nice cozy pod and all the multimedia frenzy you can imagine, why bother going outside at all? Excuse the digression but that's the thing with Sun at the moment, there is a lot of innovative thinking going on." He is right there is a lot of innovative thinking going on. It is one of the best things about working for Sun.

So think about distributed work. Currently I don't own an office, but I have one wherever I need one. All I really need is a SunRay and a phone. (With VOIP I probably won't need a phone much longer.) So why not the office as a service. Charge for the SunRay service and the computing power it gives me. My desktop is totally customized for the way I work and is accessible when ever and where ever I insert my Java badge. Why not just throw in the office space for free?

(2005-02-08 09:34:16.0) Permalink Comments [3]

Comments:

now that is what i call closing the loop. SunRay managed offices... interesting thinking. Sun could start with a couple - one on Wall Street, and one in London, Tokyo and Beijing financial district. you want some office space with your SunRay deal- here you go, somewhere to chill for the day. Or maybe airports-a tie up with American Airlines or something for the Admirals club? Emphasize the notion of SunRay as not just a service, but an exclusive club...

Posted by James Governor on February 09, 2005 at 05:54 AM PST #

[Trackback] I just finished the latest Gillmor Gang (I love that show) and there was some discussion of Sun's $1/cpu-hr annoucement. The guys discussed the obvious applications, render farms and life science applications. I agree that Sun's grid is obviously targe...

Posted by .:: a few thoughts on the subject by rob wright ::. on February 09, 2005 at 02:51 PM PST #

[Trackback] Industry analysts have been very slow to adopt blogs. What is even sadder is that the ones who cover blogging software companies don't even blog themselves. Blogs present a fundamental cultural change for the analyst business. Analyst business processe...

Posted by Thinking Out Loud: Thought Leadership from an Enterprise Architect on March 22, 2005 at 04:09 AM PST #

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