Tuesday February 14, 2006 | JohnnyL's Blog Blogged by John Loiacono |
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Extreme Makeover: Silicon Valley Style Remember the Rolling Stone ads from the '80s about “perception and reality?” On the left was a hippied-out Volkswagen van. On the right was a sleek, then-contemporary sedan - a Honda Accord, I think. Above the van it said “Perception” and above the sedan, “Reality.” Rolling Stone was trying to get advertisers to update their thinking about who was reading the magazine. These days, we have our own perception/reality problem, only we're working in Internet time now and I can't wait 10 years for people to wake up to how radically Sun has changed. (Note to ad and PR agencies: Please don't call or write; we're on it.) Some customers, press, analysts and partners are up on many of our recent (past 18 months) developments. But I still encounter the tilted puppy head when I make statements like, “All of our software stack (operating system, middleware, tools and system/service management) is FREE." .Not like free puppy free, but like zero dollar, zero restriction free. Reply: “How come I didn't know that?” Or when I say, “If you want support, indemnification, patches, upgrades, etc., to an operating system, Solaris is actually less expensive than Red Hat Enterprise Linux. You may choose Linux for other reasons, but price should not be one of them.” Response: “How can that be? Linux is free.” Unfortunately, perception is reality and you're not going to see us in Super Bowl ads any day soon letting people know otherwise. (That will certainly keep the ad agencies from calling.) But we're trying. Having Mark Andreesen (Chairman of Opsware and founder of internet start-up Ning) stand up at last week's Sun Analysts Conference and boldly state that Solaris on a Sun x64 system was less than ½ the price of a Lintel solutions was a good first step. (See the video here.) It was breathtaking for those of us fighting the perception war every day. Until next year's Super Bowl, we'll just keep making progress via hand-to-hand combat techniques. In the past 12 months alone, our software progress has been steady and substantial:
This is a complete overhaul of the product line in one year and a significant shift in our business model. I'd call it a Silicon Valley Extreme Makeover. (I actually do like the TV program.) I'm just waiting for the moment when I can have the big bus virtually pull away from the front of the new software offering and have everyone cry out in joy. Maybe if I had used Sears tools to rebuild the portfolio (and reaped an endorsement check), I'd have enough money left to afford a spot on the Super Bowl to let everyone know what we're up to. Maybe next year when my Vikings make the trek back to prominence. Right. Posted by johnnyl ( Feb 14 2006, 12:59:00 PM PST ) Permalink Comments:
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