Sun's novel idea

commentary Has the sun prematurely set on Sun Microsystems?

The company's desperate attempt to regain its footing has reached new heights. Jonathan Schwartz, Sun's chief operating officer, has gone public with his latest idea -- to buy Novell for its Linux business.

The justification? If Sun acquires Novell, IBM's Linux strategy would be in disarray.

Last year, Novell outbid Sun to purchase SuSE Linux for US$210 million, with IBM making a $50 million investment in Novell.

Schwartz believes that IBM will increasingly push SuSE as the preferred Linux platform at the expense of its partner, Red Hat.

In a blog posting, he said IBM "is in a real pickle". To him, Red Hat's dominance "leaves IBM almost entirely dependent upon SuSE/Novell" and "whoever owns Novell controls the OS on which IBM's future depends."

Sun could have bought SuSE last November but was outmanoeuvred by Novell, which has a current market capitalisation of $2.6 billion. Is Sun now compensating for its folly?

"If you're an IBM customer, you've probably received (or should prepare to receive) the pitch from IBM incenting you to move off Red Hat to SuSE -- it's clear they're worried that Red Hat's lock on customers is divorcing IBM from their customer relationships," Schwartz said.

His entire thought process is pretty myopic.

IBM is simply doing what every big business does -- executing what I define as a "promiscuous plot". Get into bed with as many partners as you can, keep them happy and reap the rewards. Doesn't Schwartz see it?

Big Blue long realised that in order to win the mindshare of the open source community, it has to play with everyone and play nice. Well, maybe not everyone but you know what I mean.

Sun is trying very hard to diversify and shed its "pure Unix shop" image. Buying a Linux company might improve matters but instead of Novell, perhaps a more viable option would be Mandrakesoft.

Mandrakesoft, which survived bankruptcy, shares one thing in common with Sun -- it hopes to see Linux-based computers in the mainstream. In France, a month-long project is underway with retail giant Carrefour to sell computers equipped with the Mandrakelinux operating system. In the US, Wal-Mart sells computers running on Linux, including Sun's version.

And so the struggle to re-invent itself continues. Sun's share price hovers around the $3.80 mark, thousands of employees have been laid off over the last few years, and its market share is dwindling.

To Microsoft, Linux has become more of a threat than Unix. And this is bad news to Sun -- when you become irrelevant to your competitor, you're virtually doomed.

Sun has an excellent research, development and engineering history, and the gift of Java has had an immeasurable impact on the computing industry. But as it attempts to confront its demons, Schwartz's impetuous announcement will surely ruffle some feathers within the company.

Well, empty vessels do make the loudest noise. Maybe it's time for Sun to take a step back and develop a proper vision and strategy instead of shooting from the hip.

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Talkback 4 comments

    Interesting reading. I have th ...Anonymous -- 03/08/04

    Interesting reading.
    I have the utmost respect for Sun Solaris and more importantly the hardware - the best product I have worked with over the past 15 years... however it's time for a new strategy.

    But the question is, which way???

    1. Push the hardware front for stability / reliability / service and support reputation that Sun has in the marketplace; OR

    2. Push on further down the Open Source / Linux path to increase market share / awareness that Sun plays in this space.

    I suggest option 2 won't go too far with other players in the market... however option 1 will be a tough sell given the proprietary nature and cost of implementing UltraSparc technology.

    Novell are clever, they've seen the light and expanded into Directory Services / cross-platform computing with their suite of products, which now just happens to include Linux. Very, very clever.

    Now, Sun needs to play their card(s).

    IBM are not dependent on SuSE ...Anonymous -- 03/08/04

    IBM are not dependent on SuSE at all. IBM could just take Red Hat or SUSE Linux and fork the code to produce their own distribution. After all the code is largely GPL.

    If Sun is really considering buying Novell simply to acquire SUSE, it shows how stupind there really are. With several billions of dollars in the bank, they could have purchased SUSE for a few hundred million, but are now considering paying $US2-3 billion for Novell.

    A truely pathetic article. Tak ...Anonymous -- 05/08/04

    A truely pathetic article. Take a look at the line "To Microsoft, Linux has become more of a threat than Unix." reveals the true nature of competency or the lack of it, of the writer commenting about technologies that she simply doesnt understand.
    Schwartz's satement as even a child can say was to simply poke IBM, make them slightly nervous, cause people to talk about SUN in the market and he succeeded absolutely.

    Sun is making some truely great technologies available to the commercial and open source communities as they always did and the latest in this endeavor is the Linx Interoperability. See
    http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1104_2-5295908.html

    Note, their interoperability is with Redhat Enterprise Linux *not* SUSE.

    Finally to all the admirers of this article, Linux is nothing but Unix and so is Solaris. In fact FYI Linux came about when Linus Torvalds simply took the hassle and compiled and completed the examples and excersises of a book called "Operating Systems" by Tanenbaum, and posted the bits and sources on the net. If you really have the passion and the patience you can write your own linux too.

    Gee, you'd think Ken Brown fro ...Anonymous -- 05/08/04

    Gee, you'd think Ken Brown from the Alexis de Tocqueville Microsoft Front would have better things to do than pretend to be an anonymous software engineer from San Jose in talkback posts. That whole "Linus copied Linux" bollocks is so old and so discredited you'd have trouble taking seriously any comments from someone who still claims it's true.

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