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Inexplicably, weve gotten through much of 2006 without Linux completely kicking Unix out of the market. Analysts and Linux
faithful are at a loss to explain how Sun Microsystems server revenue climbed almost 14 percent since the second quarter last year, pushing Sun ahead of Dell in the rankings. Gartner pegs Suns Unix
server market share at 56.9 percent.
Inexplicably, weve gotten through much of 2006 without Linux completely kicking Unix out of the market. Analysts and Linux
faithful are at a loss to explain how Sun Microsystems server revenue climbed almost 14 percent since the second quarter last year, pushing Sun ahead of Dell in the rankings. Gartner pegs Suns Unix
server market share at 56.9 percent.
Playing analyst
for a moment, Ill send myself an e-mail explaining that having
majority share of a dwindling market is nothing to crow about, and that
a 10-foot rise from a mile-deep hole is hardly a rocket-like ascent. (I
can be such a killjoy.)
The
truth is, considerations of my alter ego and his brethren
notwithstanding, Suns growth is a victory, and I will shelve my
humility yet again to point out that Ive been certain of Suns renewal
since I started writing this column. It is a matter of patience,
vision, and the nerve to stick with that vision even when nobody else
seems to see it Suns way.
Suns
vision is to make Solaris on Opteron an industry leader. Unlike IBM and
HP, which treat Opteron like a second-source Xeon, Sun invested in
unique engineering that leverages Opterons superior performance and
power utilization characteristics while meeting enterprise
expectations. Suns Opteron systems are not the vendors cheap seats
reserved for those who cant afford RISC. Sun is as serious about AMD64
as it is about Sparc.
Sun
also stretched its neck out -- way out -- by daring to differ with the
seemingly universal consensus that Linux is the path paved with gold.
Is there a compelling reason to abandon Unix? Maybe the qualities that
made Unix an enterprise mainstay still exist. Linux faithful mock
Solaris with the adolescent nickname Slowaris, but I challenge
critics to find one instance among the innumerable huge-scale Solaris
deployments where decision makers are considering a switch to Linux for
speeds sake. The only intelligent argument in favor of taking Unix
down was that it was closed source. So Sun took the bold step of open
sourcing its crown jewel, Solaris, to take the proprietary millstone
from around its neck. Now Solaris is the only one of the Big Three
Unixes that is open source.
Sparc,
too, has rallied. Sun has long maintained power-efficient processors in
its product line, and the eight-core, 32-thread UltraSparc T1 trounces
competitors with peak power utilization of 79 watts. Each core runs at
a maximum of 1.2 GHz; but eight cores, four threads per core, RISC
architecture, and on-chip memory and bus controllers give Sparc the
advantage over dual-core Intel x86 CPUs in clock-for-clock comparisons.
What
really puts Intel in the doghouse is Suns decision to open the design
of UltraSparc T1 for public use. It is the silicon equivalent of open
source, and its no lip service. Inexpensive and readily available
programmable logic puts anyone a few hundred dollars away from being
able to mint their own 64-bit Sparc CPUs. Of course, it takes more than
that to make it do anything; but the point is that Sun has matched IBM
in opening its server processor technology.
Suns
growth is good news for the entire industry. It proves, as I keep
pointing out, that trends are useless in predicting the future. Find
players with vision, drive and patience, mixed with a desire to please
customers as well as shareholders, and its easy to pick the winners.
Suns a winner.
Read the original article: InfoWorld: Sun is winning in the server market
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