EASIER, FASTER, SAFER...for Beginners and Experts on Sun ZFS, Java, Solaris, VirtualBox for ISV and Partners

ISV TechBriefings

These worldwide forums will provide you with access to the most recent news announcements and developments in Sun's strategy and product roadmaps as well as the select opportunity to meet with Sun and alliance partner thought leaders and technology experts.

Come listen to the latest updates on :
   * Sun Systems Overview
   * Solaris10 & Virtualization Technologies
   * Sun's Open Source Strategy (OpenSolaris, MySQL, OpenSPARC)
   * Java Technology

We look forward to your participation!
Space is limited for the Sun Technology Briefing, so please register by May 20th, 2008 at the below link to ensure we can reserve your space.

You will receive a confirmation email with directions, agenda and other details after registration is completed.

https://events-at-sun.com/techbriefings/

Webinar or please join in...

France (Paris)
Ireland
England
Germany (Frankfurt)
Singapore
Bulgaria (Sofia)
Croatia (Zagreb)
UAE (Dubai)
Saudi Arabia (Rijad)
Egypt (Cairo)
South Africa (Johannesburg)
Tunisia


Dear partners,

Solaris 8 was a great operating system and very popular. It's now time to say good bye if it comes to the release planning of your product on top of the Solaris operating system. Use the Sun Solaris EOL page to manage your own software releases.

The Solaris 8 story looks as follow

  • First shipment: January 2000
  • Last sale: Feb. 16, 2007
  • EOL (Phase 1): March 31, 2009
  • Extended End of Live: March, 31, 2012 (Service through special support contracts)
...and there is one more thing. The extremely performant Sun CMT server line which is based on the T1 and T2 processors replaced the old Ultra Sparc IIIi based server line.This means that we are not shipping anymore systems which allow to install and operate Solaris 8.

What does this mean for an end customer?

  • They may use Solaris 8 as long as you want. They are not anymore able to purchase it. Normal support will end in 2009. Support through special contracts can be provided at least through 2012. The Solaris 8 Transition FAQ is a great document to read.

 What does this mean for software partners and their release strategy?

  • End customers haven't been been able to purchase Solaris 8 for a year
  • Standard Sun support will end in a year.
  • New Sun servers aren't anymore able to operate on Solaris 8
  • The pool of Solaris 8 customers will shrink since there are no more systems available for new installations.
  • This means that ISVs can consider to drop Solaris 8 in their support matrix for new products being shipped in future.

What does this mean for the build systems of our software partners?

  • Build your software on the oldest Solaris release which you want to support. Qualify your software on younger Solaris version like 9, 10 or OpenSolaris and rely on the binary compatibility.
  • Build servers for new and future products: Consider to migrate your next generation build server to Solaris 9 or 10. The official EOL process for these operating systems hasn't yet started.
  • Build servers for old products and patches or escalations on Solaris 8:
    • Inform your customers that the normal EOL of Solaris 8 will happen in a year and let them know that you plan to stop support as well by retiring these systems in a year.
    • Plan for Extended End of service live. service contracts with Sun if your customers want to do the same.
    • Consider to use the Solaris 8 container on Solaris 10. This solution has a for free evaluation license.


Der ISV Partnertag am 03.12.ist ein Forum für das technische Management unserer ISVs.

Wir wollen hier aufzeigen, welche technologischen Kernthemen Sun in der Zukunft vorantreiben wird
und wie eine technische Zusammenarbeit in 2008 mit ISVs ausschauen kann.

Die SunTechDays am 04. und 05.12.2007 richten sich vor allem an Entwickler mit den Schwerpunkten Java und Solaris.

Hier die Links zur Anmeldung:
ISV Partnertag am 03.12.2007: http://de.sun.com/sunnews/events/2007/isv/20071203/
Sun TechDays: http://de.sun.com/sunnews/events/2007/20071203/

Für die TechDays biete ich Ihnen gern Freitickets an. Bitte schicken Sie mir eine kurze Email!

Ihre

 Silke Pumberger

 


Eins, zwei, drei! Im Sauseschritt
Läuft die Zeit; wir laufen mit. (Wilhelm Busch).


Kaum hat man seine Anwendung validiert und Erfolg mit Ihr beim Kunden spricht alle Welt von einer neuen Javaversion.

ISV-Engineering arbeitet mit seinen Partnern gemeinsam daran den Software-Life-Cycle der Anwendung und der Javaprodukte optimal aufeinander abzustimmen. Java SE ist in sehr, sehr vielen Bereichen sehr kompatibel über die Versionen hinweg geworden ist.

Die unterstützte Lebensdauer einer Java SE Versionen muss jedoch gemanaged werden.

JDK 1.3.1 ist zum Beispiel aus der regulären Wartung (sprich EOL) heraus gefallen.


Sie sind ein Softwarehaus? Melden Sie sich doch in Bezug auf solche Fragen bei uns!

Oops...

Der eigentliche Grund für diesen Eintrag ist ein sehr schöner Beitrag im Java-Production blog meines Kollegen Stephen Fitch aus der Produktgruppe.

Ein sehr gut gemachter Beitrag mit guten Daten um den Lebenszyklus Ihres Produkts ,welches Java SE benutzt, zuplanen.

Der Artikel „ JAVA SE Lifecycle from GA to EOSL and beyond“ ist ein Muss für alle die sicher sein wollen, dass die Anwendung optimal über den gesamten Lebenszyklus mit Java funktioniert.




Erstes deutsches Solaris Code Camp des ISV Engineering in Walldorf am 19.6.2007[Read More]
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