Monday Oct 18, 2004

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.
...
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.
...
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.
Go get 'em Larry! Nice piece here on sun.com/news. Love this bit here:

The launch of Solaris 10 is a once-in-a-decade, market-tipping event that will set Sun apart from IBM (and HP) by providing platform choice, predictability, and stability, along with disruptive innovations such as Solaris containers and DTrace, which gives customers the unique ability to diagnose real problems in real time.

Works for me.
Scott's out there talking again. Love it. Pretty interesting Q&A here in the San Jose Mercury News. It's a quick read. Give it a look. I clipped some of the more entertaining exchanges below. I sometimes wonder, though. Don't reporters get tied of asking the same old questions? Especially to McNealy. Oh, well. The press is coming around. I think the most important bit from this Q&A is Scott's reference to Sun's getting leading with Opteron.

On bring proprietary ...

Q: There is a perception that Sun is trying to lock in customers with proprietary technology.

A: For 22 years, I've said name a technical specification at Sun that is not open, published or adopted by some or all of the computer industry. You can't. To call Sun proprietary is as big a lie as you could put in your newspaper. If I were to say IBM is bankrupt and you were to publish that, that would be the same as saying Sun is proprietary.

On killing SPARC ...

Q: What if your advisers or investors say drop Sparc and adopt Intel?

A: Who said that? You're asking overly general questions.

Q: Why don't you drop Sparc?

A It's one of the most successful microprocessor architectures in the history of the world. It has an incredible installed base. We grew volumes 46 percent in the June quarter. Blew everybody else away. It is the No. 1 64-bit architecture. It scales from one processor task to hundreds simultaneously. It is quite embedded in the telecommunications services market place. It is open and multi-vendor and quite profitable for us. Other than that I can't think of a reason. Why as a car company wouldn't we want to do our own engines? People say you're doing too much. Why are you doing engines?

On lagging Linux server sales ...

Q: Sun's Linux server sales still seem small. If anyone can build and sell a computer server with the open-source operating system, why isn't your share of Linux bigger?

A: Because we got in at the end of the train. We tried to get others to adopt Solaris and we did 360's in the mud. Until we did our Intel Xeon strategy a couple of years ago, we were late on the Xeon parade. We are first on the AMD Opteron parade.
When people see me get stressed out they often tell me, "Breathe, Jim. Breathe!" Sometimes it's funny; sometimes it just pisses me off. "Of course I'm breathing ... I'm not blue, you know," I bark back. Well, I guess sometimes I am.

Also, it's sometimes amusing when that word -- breathe! -- magically pops up on instant messenger from time to time when a bunch of us are on a call. My friends seem to intuitively know at just what point in the conversation I'm freaking out -- even if I'm not saying anything. Pretty talented friends I have, eh? The little message is usually pretty accurate, too. This is bad. Ok. I'll start breathing. I tripped over this article on stress and breath today. It's long. Who would have known that breathing was so darn important. Aside from the obvious, of course. Anyway, I'm meditating an hour a day now, and I want to bump it up to two hours a day. How I'll fit that in, I don't know just yet. I'll have to dump some stuff for sure. I'm breathing, baby ... I'm breathing ...

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