Seems McNealy, Schwartz, Loiacono, and Papadopoulos have some nifty plans up their sleeves. Check out this article here in InfomationWeek. Very cool. A lot is going to change around here, that's for sure. I pulled out some of the juicy bits to chew on below:

By year's end, it plans to finalize a sweeping plan to make its software available as open source, including a version of Solaris.
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In perhaps its boldest and riskiest move, the company plans to transform its proprietary software stack into open source that's available at no cost. In some ways, the move to open-source Solaris brings Sun full circle. In 1982, McNealy and colleagues founded Sun to sell a commercial version of a free Unix operating system. By putting a version of Solaris back into the public domain, Sun hopes to reinvigorate demand for its servers and broaden its ecosystem of Java developers.
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Sun won't be going halfway. The company will offer "a major portion, if not all, of our software foundation" as open source, says John Loiacono, the executive VP in charge of Sun's software group, adding that it will do so using an industry-norm license, "not some one-off specialty license." Sun is betting it can make money from service and support agreements, not unlike Red Hat Inc.'s approach to Linux. "If you want it fully supported or want input into new features, then you might have to pay for that," Loiacono says.
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Sun's CTO, Greg Papadopoulos, and Microsoft's chairman and chief software architect, Bill Gates, have been working closely the past few months on a road map to bridge the Sun and Microsoft environments.
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