Schwartz, who took over in
April 2006, cut about 2,750 workers to reverse losses. Sun, which makes
both computer hardware and software, has now posted five straight
quarters in the black.
William Kreher, an analyst with Edward Jones
& Co. in St. Louis, questioned the viability of a business model
based on free software.
"They certainly have an uphill battle," he told Bloomberg News.
Unlike companies that fiercely guard and charge license fees for their
intellectual property, Sun and other open-source companies offer
downloads of underlying source code for free to customers and
third-party developers.
The marketing approach is intended to encourage adoption of tools that
lead to subscription-based services and stimulate sales of Sun computer
servers as well. MySQL offers its database software for free and makes
money on maintenance.
Schwartz used the MySQL acquisition to address naysayers in his blog.
"There are still folks in the world who don't believe there's an
economic model behind open source - they thus believe $1 billion is an
outlandish price to pay for MySQL," he wrote. The most extreme critics,
he said, see open-source "as nothing more than playgrounds for
hobbyists."
Schwartz continued: "Companies that freely distribute their products,
rather than limit access via pricing or proprietary licensing, are
simply prioritizing adoption over immediate revenue."
Schwartz portrayed the acquisition as the most important in Sun's
history, creating new market opportunities. Sun, the fourth-largest
server maker, has endured a 30 percent drop in its stock price over the
past year.
Sun is exploring other prospects for acquisitions, especially
small-scale "tuck-in" deals, Schwartz said. But, he added, "MySQL was
clearly the crown jewel of the open-source marketplace."
The deal includes $800 million in cash and $200 million in assumed
obligations. MySQL, which has 400 employees, was headed toward an
initial public offering when Sun offered a premium price for the
acquisition, Schwartz said.
Customers can now have "peace of mind" to apply MySQL to "mission
critical" uses, Schwartz said because it will be now backed by Sun's
17,000-member global sales and support network.
"We will be able to accelerate the road map," said former MySQL CEO
Marten Mickos, who was named senior vice president of Sun's newly
formed database group within Sun's software division.
The China deal was jointly announced in Silicon Valley and Beijing. "We
appreciate Sun's open-source strategy, especially Sun's outstanding
contribution in the open-sourced (integrated circuits) area, and we
encourage the active cooperation effort between China's universities
and Sun in the teaching and research area," said Professor Zhao
Qinping, vice minister of the Ministry of Education.
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