
Monday July 18, 2005
Update after JavaOne Conference
We closed our fiscal year with a bang at JavaOne Conference the last week in June.
It was fantastic to see the amount of buzz and activity surrounding
the show - from announcements, to quality of sessions, to business
conducted during the week. Many noted that they sensed an increase
in show mojo compared to last year.
Only one thing irked me. Following a session with press and
analysts I hosted, an article appeared (that was then repeated
numerous times) stating Sun was decommiting from our support of
the Java Desktop System (JDS), specifically on Linux.
Nope.
We remain fully committed to JDS. The point I made that caused
the stir is that you will see us begin to emphasize JDS on
Solaris and SunRay "even more". JDS on Linux has been pretty much
the only conversation we've had to date. But with the renewed
interest in Solaris, Solaris on x86 and x64 and Open Solaris,
there is a commensurate increase in interest in JDS on those
platforms.
Further, with the closing of our Tarantella acquisition last week,
we have also dramatically improved our ability to deliver a full
function JDS thin client solution -- running Windows, Linux, Solaris,
mainframe, AS/400...you name it.
JDS is alive and well. On Linux, Solaris and SunRay thin clients.
And the proof is in the pudding. Witness the third release of JDS,
which should appear in the calendar Q3 time frame. With improved
functionality, performance and usability. And did I mention
it will run on Linux and Solaris and SunRay? It's enough to get
your mojo rising.
Posted by johnnyl
( Jul 18 2005, 05:00:00 PM PDT )
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Wednesday July 13, 2005
OpenSSO Announcement
I'm finding the identity management industry pretty fascinating to
watch... and a lot of fun to participate in. One major vendor announced
the 5 axioms of identity. Those axioms lead to the 6 consequences of
identity. Another big player has for some time talked about the 7 laws
of identity. Lots of numbers. Lots of words and slides to explain the
theories. I thought about putting together yet another slide on the "11
principles of identity" (have to outdo the competition... and 10 is too
obvious). But here at Sun we have a bias for action. And what we've been
talking about internally is the need to change the conversation away
from "plumbing" and more about innovation and solutions themselves.
So today Sun is changing the identity market landscape by offering a
very valuable identity service aimed primarily at the developer
community -- the people who have to actually develop, test and deploy
new services. We're open sourcing one of the IT industry’s top
revenue-producing technologies: web single sign-on. That’s right! we're
making another key component of our Sun Java Enterprise System, Sun's web
single sign-on (OpenSSO) technology, freely and openly available.
We're moving the conversation forward to things like federation and
identity services. We’re looking at how identity becomes inherent in the
infrastructure services we’re building. We’re ready to quit talking
about web single sign-on and which one is the right product, what
standard is the right standard. It’s time to take these issues off the
table. It’s not about web SSO, it’s about giving developers easy and
open access to the fundamental underlying technology they need to
quickly and securely build new services. They need to know that these
base identity services are always there, consistently, pervasively and
re-usable. That's how we'll get identity built into every application or
service.
Today I presented to the identity management industry’s leading
innovators and architects at Burton Group’s Catalyst event in San Diego.
I discussed how identity management accelerates the Participation Age
ITconversations and
specifically, how Sun is fueling the acceleration of this new era.
The new world of participation requires our customers to address both
opportunities and security threats at the same time. They’re being asked
to drive new applications and services that will generate new lines of
revenue—open their doors online to more and more participants each day.
At the same time, they are still trying to address the latest compliance
demands while fending off identity theft attacks. The key thing to note
about participation is that businesses can no longer choose between
opportunity and security—we have reached the age of no compromise. You
can’t let growth take a backseat to security & privacy…at the same time,
you have to find a way to limit your exposure and risk as you open
yourself up to more access, more participation. That's the challenge Sun
is focusing on.
And the good news is, with identity management driving business models
to accommodate both revenue and growth, you don’t have to make that choice.
Web single sign-on is the most basic capability to opening up access
securely and now it’s going to be widely and freely available to become
“built-in” to applications being developed around the world. OpenSSO
will provide open source code that will help members of the Java
developer community build critical security capabilities such as
authentication and web single sign-on into every application they build
and deploy.
And we're not just throwing this code over the wall. We're building a
community. See OpenSSO First code distribution will be available in Q4
of this calendar year.
It is generally believed that open source technologies are for commodity
software products. However, this announcement proves that theory wrong.
I argue that open source technologies can also be for software that
needs to be commoditized in order for progress to be made. For years
people have looked to Sun to innovate, to do things a little differently
than the rest of our industry - kind of like a Crazy Ivan "let's zig when everyone expects us to zag" maneuver.. Watch this space for more zigs, zags.
Posted by johnnyl
( Jul 13 2005, 03:50:04 PM PDT )
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