Sun Microsystems Inc.'s executive vice president and chief technology officer, Greg
Papadopoulos, fiercely defended his company's future, while speaking Wednesday morning, Oct. 26, in San Francisco at the Vortex conference.
Facing tough questions from chief information officers sitting in the
audience skeptical whether the company can make money from its new strategy
around utility computing and open-source software, Papadopoulos answered with
an analogy. He said the company can prosper as computing becomes
even more commoditized. Just as electricity is a commodity, General Electric
Co. still earns a hefty profit from manufacturing more effective power
plants.
He contrasted his company's efforts in open-source software with that of
IBM Corp. by saying all of Sun's software is, or soon will be, made
open source. That includes Sun's identity management and grid computing
software. "I think IBM uses open source as a foil," he said, adding that if
IBM's really serious about it, where are its plans to make WebSphere, DB2
or Tivoli open source?
Papadopoulos also elaborated on the company's recent alliance
with Google Inc. "What are those pieces one has of a desktop experience that
is rendered as a network service," he said pointing to e-mail and office productivity suites as examples. "We have pieces that can go into
that."
In fewer words, he added that Google has a few weak areas that Sun
could help it shore up. First, most of its users are anonymous, which sharply contrasts with rivals such as Yahoo! Inc. and eBay Inc. Second, Google
lacks a large software distribution channel. He believes Sun can help since
there are 25 million Java Runtime Environment downloads each month.
Papadopoulos added that Sun's hardware competence might be able to help
Google with an estimated 500,000 servers that support
its popular online services. — Joshua Jaffe
Go to story from Slashdot
Continue reading below