Sun continues to take a performance pounding, and the rumors of replacements, layoffs and revamps are beyond swirling and now perpetuating skepticism of the company. It strikes me as odd that Sun, which has embraced open source and is also the defacto leading
corporate open source software contributor, is continually dogged by
doubts about its transitions and tenures despite well-respected
technology and participation in open source. Part of this lies in the
company’s continuing dichotomy in strategy — a reference to tepid
support for Linux and continued preference for and focus on Solaris.
This is a large part of Sun’s ‘handicap,’ IMHO when it comes to Linux
and open source. Sun has its own OS, and therefore is in the same
category as the dreaded Microsoft for many.
However, Sun has a longstanding, solid history with open source.
OpenOffice, OpenSolaris, OpenSparc, Java, etc. While the company has
generally benefited from its move to make Java open source under the
GPL, its OpenSolaris and Solaris OS under the CDDL have been a somewhat
different story. Nevertheless, Sun knows how to do open source right
and continues to participate effectively in a variety of open source
software communities, projects and enterprise products.
Let’s also not forget that it was Sun that started off this year with a billion dollar bet
on open source, MySQL and its database software and business. When
Jonathan Schwartz and co. were on the conference call for the
acquisition in January, there were many references to Sun’s belief in
the LAMP stack (along with the expected reference to the possibility of
a SAMP stack that includes Solaris). And therein lies the dichotomy
again.
Does Sun want to support and see success from Linux? Or does it want
to see success from Solaris (and OpenSolaris)? The company may want to
have it both ways and while it’s certainly possible and practical to
support multiple operating systems in this day and age, Sun needs to
make it clear whether it wants to fan the flames or fight the fire that
is Linux. Let’s consider Novell. Is it putting much investment or
roadmapping into Netware? No, the company is focused on Linux and
integration of NetWare and Linux in Open Enterprise Server since it
acquired SUSE in 2003. While an acquisition spurred the Linux embrace
in Novell’s case, Sun does not necessarily need to buy a Linux vendor
(there are fewer of those, too with Xandros’ recent purchase of Linspire).
The bottom line is that many if not most enterprise Linux wins come
at the expense of Solaris and other Unix software. Sun would be wise to
recognize this and it could go a long way toward clarifying its
achievements and objectives with open source and getting its house in
order.