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Dont look now, but Sun Microsystems Inc. has a new bounce in its step.
From its recent rapprochement with chipmaking rival and
(64-bit antagonist) Intel Corp., to its own aggressively multicore
UltraSPARC chip strategy; from its still-incubating datacenter-in-a-box
initiative ("Project Blackbox"), to its fully-hatched virtualization
strategy, Sun seems to have the rumble of a corporate engine thats
firing on all cylinders according to several industry watchers.
Dont look now, but Sun Microsystems Inc. has a new bounce in its step.
From its recent rapprochement with chipmaking rival and
(64-bit antagonist) Intel Corp., to its own aggressively multicore
UltraSPARC chip strategy; from its still-incubating datacenter-in-a-box
initiative ("Project Blackbox"), to its fully-hatched virtualization
strategy, Sun seems to have the rumble of a corporate engine thats
firing on all cylinders according to several industry watchers.
At its annual analyst summit, held last week in San Francisco,
Sun executives seemed ready to rumble, too. "Self-congratulatory
rhetoric permeates any number of IT industry analyst events, but the
mood at this weeks Sun Analyst Summit
was particularly festive,"
notes Charles King, a principal with consultancy Pund-IT, who attended
the event.
"[A]t least some of the companys buoyancy was deserved. The
past half decade has been almost unrelentingly dreary for Sun, with a
nadir in 2003 that found the company shedding customers and employees
alike, with little hope for a break in the clouds."
King links the change in Suns fortunes to the ascent of
"nerdy wunderkind" Jonathan Schwartz last April. With Schwartz at the
helm, Sun announced Project BlackBox, expanded and enhanced its
virtualization strategy, and patched things up with Intel. One upshot,
King argues, has been Suns return to profitability.
On the plus side, King argues, theres a lot to like in Sun
2.0. For starters, he says, there was Suns 2005 acquisition of the
former Storage Technology Inc. (StorageTek), which helped round "out a
dreadfully thin storage portfolio." In addition, says King, Suns
partnerships with first Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and now Intel
helped establish it as a credible contender in the x86 server space.
Challenges Ahead
In this last respect, King and other industry watchers have
cited Suns rapprochement with Intel, in particular, as a game-changing
event (see http://esj.com/Case_Study/article.aspx?EditorialsID=2425).
While the market significance and psychological importance of the
Sun/Intel accord are undeniable, few in the analyst community think the
deal portends a more significant degree of collaboration between the
two vendors.
"[T]here just arent enough details to give any real credence
to Suns and Intels claims that theres more to this announcement than
the surface facts," said Gordon Haff, a senior analyst with consultancy
Illuminata. "I asked Pat Gelsinger, who heads Intels Digital
Enterprise Group, what optimizing for Java means exactly. Does it
mean that Intel will be putting in silicon to make Java run faster?
Well, not exactly. All Pat would cop to was a more generalized
statement around the importance of managed codelike Java and .NETand
that Intel has already been working to optimize how they perform."
Ditto for Schwartzs description of Suns new "multi-purpose"
R&D strategy, which he says will make it easier for Sun to gain
synergies, save money, and enhance product deliveries. "[It] looked
interesting enough in PowerPoint but [I] expect it to be devilishly
difficult to execute," King says. "Likewise, Suns plans to join its
sales and services organizations to present a united face to customers
sounds like a novel approach, but [I] expect Sun to encounter more than
a few rough spots, ruts, potholes, and bridge out warnings along the
way."
Schwartz and CFO Michael Lehman also talked up the importance
of Suns company-wide deployment of Oracle11i, which is slated to
replace a heterogeneous mix of data sources. With completion of that
project still some three years out, King notes, it cant be considered
an arrow in Suns quiver. Nevertheless, he concludes, if the mood that
prevailed at Suns recent Analyst Summit is any indication, Schwartz
and other executives seem to be brimming with confidence. The question,
he says, is how much of it is hubris.
"Perhaps most notable
was the bellicose verbiage that
Schwartz and some other executives indulged in, with jarring phrases
including brutal efficiency and IT as a weapon coloring more
conventional business and technical points," he says, comparing the
reborn Sun to the incapacitated Black Knight of Monty Python fame.
"After nearly a year of close work with needle and thread, Sun
appears ready to get back in the saddle. However, with only one quarter
of profits under its belt, a touch less self-confidence and a bit more
realistic caution might be in order if the company wishes to avoid
future surgeries."
Read the original article: http://www.esj.com/enterprise/article.aspx?EditorialsID=2450
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