Sun's announcement of the Advisory Board comes as the OpenSPARC
initiative has been gaining some momentum. Since its introduction last
March, there have been over 3,500 OpenSPARC T1 hardware downloads and
over 2,600 OpenSPARC T1 software downloads, Sun reported.
"To grow, we can't just rely on upgrading our installed base. We have to go after new customers, and that's what open source
helps us do," said John Fowler, executive vice president of Sun's
systems group. "The OpenSPARC program helps us accelerate our adoption
rate into the new, emerging Web 2.0 market. Last quarter, 60 percent of
the trial units for our Sun Fire CoolThreads servers went to new
customers, [and] that's a trend we want to continue."
The new OpenSPARC Community Advisory Board (CAB) will be
comprised of five charter members: two from Sun and three outside the
company. Nathan Brookwood, analyst with Insight64; Assistant Professor
Jose Renau, UC Santa Cruz; and Robert Ober, fellow, office of the CTO,
LSI Logic (NYSE: LSI)
,
are joined by David Weaver, senior staff engineer, and Simon Phipps,
chief open source officer, from Sun. The board will solicit input from
the OpenSPARC community to shape the evolution of the initiative. The
board's charter is
posted online.
"By open sourcing its core technologies -- Solaris and SPARC
-- Sun has moved from talking the talk of open systems to walking the
walk," said Insight 64's Nathan Brookwood. "Since no company ever has a
monopoly on creativity, Sun's ability to expand the community of those
who can contribute to SPARC and Solaris should increase the market
opportunities for all involved."
Ubuntu Shares Community Vision
Ubuntu Linux, which last May was the first third-party to
announce a port of its GNU/Linux OS to the Sun Fire T1000 and T2000
platforms, has reported over 3,000 downloads of its OS supporting the
OpenSPARC T1 processor, as well as at least 800 sites running Ubuntu on
SPARC systems.
The port was carried out by the Linux community, in
particular David Miller. The community's UltraSPARC work lead to
support for UltraSPARC T1 in the mainline Linux kernel (2.6.17).
"Ubuntu and Sun share a common vision: accelerating the adoption of technology and community development through freedom and openness," said Mark Shuttleworth, CEO, Ubuntu.
Gentoo Linux, which focuses on delivering better -- what it
terms "near-ideal" -- tools for developers, is now supporting the
UltraSPARC T1 processor on Sun Fire T1000 and T2000 servers, and has
developed a specific installed CD to assist with the process. Through
the OpenSPARC program, Gentoo sees an opportunity to further extend its
reach into the enterprise
market.
Meanwhile, Simply RISC -- a team of former STMicroelectronics
engineers working in Italy and England -- has published the first
derivative chip design based on OpenSPARC. The 64-bit, single-core
design targets embedded applications in PDAs
, set-top boxes and digital cameras.
The design is freely downloadable from the Simply RISC Web site and can be supported by operating system distributions from OpenSolaris or GNU/Linux.
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