ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Office applications Toolkit

The future of Sun

Tony Hallett Special to ZDNet.co.uk

Published: 31 Jul 2003 08:54 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

On a major visit to the UK this week, taking in customers, media briefings and other events, even including a dawn-'til-dusk day of golf with Gary Player, Sun Microsystems CEO Scott McNealy has been doing his witty best to talk up his company's long-term prospects. But, Tony Hallett asks, does his vision of vertically integrated technology and simplified computing stack up?

No one can accuse Sun of kowtowing to other companies' technologies, other people's approaches to IT. From Java-based smart cards to various software to high-end 64-bit servers running on its own processor architecture, the company has what many like to call an end-to-end approach.

Known as a consummate seller of servers -- a tag that makes Sun execs wince -- the company enjoyed boom years in the late nineties. However, despite positive cash flow, recent quarters have seen sales tumble. Some are even writing off the vendor, in the face of threats on many fronts, in the form of the Linux operating system and the drive of rivals such as Dell, HP and IBM.

There seem to be two sides to Sun right now. There's the big picture vision, embodied in CEO Scott McNealy, and there's the experience of customers, users at the coalface looking at some tough times.

Listen to McNealy and -- not for the first time -- you may leave thinking the world is about to embrace everything he's peddling.

He talks up the company's position -- despite a jittery share price and business that may only just be recovering -- tending to focus on the battle with the big boys of the industry and simplifying IT.

On Microsoft and its big Web services offensive, he says: "Imagine no one was doing Java and everyone was doing .Net. Don't imagine it. It'd be a nightmare."

On interoperability, he says: "We interoperate with everything out there including Microsoft. Sometimes we interoperate better with Microsoft than Microsoft does."

So far, so McNealy. Only now he adds, despite the steady-not-stellar take up of Java, that: "Java won. It's over. Ain't even close. The world hasn't figured it out but Microsoft has and they don't quite know what to do about it."

Safe to say it's a position not just Microsoft would dispute.

But as one of the top tech CEOs, rather than as a man wrestling some of the world's biggest companies, McNealy's latest kick has been all about making computing easier.

"I don't see any other industry organised the way the computer industry has been. It doesn't make sense. It is stunningly inefficient," he says.

His concern, and one he has voiced in the recent past, is that maintaining systems is getting to be too much work. What's more, users are realising how under-utilised most of their kit is, whether it's storage, server 'sprawl' or something else.

So Sun is pitched as "the company that has all the pieces", an antidote to a heterogeneous, mixed-up world. Trouble is, many of his customers must live in such mixed-up worlds, for all sorts of reasons.

Dennis Beard, director of Information System Services at logistics company TNT, says: "I consider myself a business person. What I want to know is how to get to there from where I am now, with legacy applications and all the rest."

There are customers who are devoted to Sun but many a large datacentre operator -- the telcos, service providers and banks, for example -- operate mixed environments. Sun has traditionally been strong in the City of London but even some financial institutions, who have stuck with the company as it moved from workstations to high-end servers and storage, are weighing up their options.

One major competitor even reckons investment banks - famed for putting buy, hold or sell tags on their every decision -- are increasingly considering Sun a 'sell'. It's a claim Sun's new UK MD, Leslie Stretch -- a former City man himself -- denies.

Other users have seen huge benefits from embracing Sun's vision. University of Strathclyde is a big Sun fan, consolidating 20-30 servers to two big Sun machines and a storage area network, both mirrored across two campus sites. University portal software is written in Java and student and administration services have been greatly improved, according to Dr Stuart Brough, the university's director of information technology services. He proudly reports just two hours' downtime in two years (that's 0.99989 uptime, for the anoraks), and that was more to do with the local electricity company.

But such converts aren't as common as Sun would like. The answer, it maintains, is more investment for the long run. Manufacturing, befitting a now mature company, is in line with strict 'sigma' process metrics and best practice.

Increasingly, there are also pushes to deliver more to customers before boxes turn up. iForce centres allow users to mess around with configurations and hardware and software, while a 'customer-ready systems' initiative lets users dial-in to systems on the manufacturing facility floor. Feedback also flows from engineers at that level to R&D departments.

In some respects it is inconceivable anyone can doubt Sun as a long-term player. Its technology and people are first class and its vision compelling. However, so often an endgame, maybe five years in the future, is what's talked about -- that certainly seems to be the case with its N1 systems management framework, a subject for another time. The company's share price is jumpy, however, because analysts and investors are concerned about the here and now.

So two predictions, which aren't at all conflicting -- Sun is now more scrutinised than ever as a viable user choice, and Sun will be around for as long as we care to look into the future.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Dell

Did you find this article useful?
39 out of 64 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments

Related Jobs

IBM Maximo Solution Architect

Be capable of proactively engaging subject matter experts from various organisations (including IBM) as a means to deliver a complete vision of the ...

Software Development Team Leader - .Net, SQL Server 2005 in Plymouth

My client is a large manufacturer that is looking for an experienced man manager as well as a technical candidate to join their current team. This ...

C# & SQL Server developer,Financial Management Co. London

This is a relatively small company compared to some of the huge Tier 1 Investment Banks providing you with much more exposure to the Business and ...

Featured Talkback

Why do so many (virtually all) software packages think that they are so important that they have to be started automatically every time the computer boots? What is the largest number of "speed access", "update check", "camera download" and whatever other background programs you have ever seen running? Of those, how many did you really need?

By: J.A. Watson

Read full story:
Annoying software: a rogues' gallery

Discussions

harpless harpless

SAP goes big business

Friday 25 July 2008, 6:17 PM

1 comment
pjc158 pjc158

Will Drizzle rain on Sun's MySql

Friday 25 July 2008, 5:30 PM

1 comment

Vista Upgrade Blog

Microsoft's pre-modern message puts a...

Over at ZDNet.com, Ed Bott reports a first sighting of Microsoft's eagerly awaited $300 million ad campaign. Already the cause of much speculation, the consensus is that this will be... More

8 comments

A $40 CONSUMER-class router has create...

Believe it or not I don't work in IT, haven't for 7 years. Yes I work with Microsoft's Windows XP Embedded and as a result I have to know a lot about the OS, the kernal, Win API calls... More

Post a comment

Sick Puppy Redo

I generally follow a dispassionate investigative process when trying to discern what happened when a project goes bad. Although its a low priority item, it gets done simply because... More

Post a comment