IBM & Sun Agreement Puts Pressure on HP 182
eldavojohn writes "IBM has turned to long time rival Sun in an effort to bring Solaris to its mainframes. Sun may be taking this chance to drop out of the server market while at the same time capture Solaris subscriptions via IBM sales. Either way, this certainly pressures HP in the server department."
out of the server market? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't know, Sun is investing quite a bit in their new niagra processors, so why would they get out of the server business?
Submitter is an idiot (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Submitter is an idiot (Score:4, Informative)
If IBM sells more Solaris servers, Sun wins long term software support and IBM wins hardware sales and support, and both extend their brands. Of course, having their own line of hardware keeps a steady stream of support business; but I think they'd move their hardware business over to smaller niche markets or consolidate it with a larger company in a fiscal heartbeat. Sun is looking at every way to capture more developers.
I for one... (Score:3, Funny)
IBM did that a long time ago (Score:2)
Nah, this'll never fly (Score:3, Interesting)
Why?
Admin: "There's a bug in the operating system, it's corrupting data under these circumstances"
Sun: "Naw, not at all. The problem is in the IBM firmware. The operating system is doing the right thing".
IBM: "WTF? no it ain't, the problem is in the operating system."
Queue many hours of haranguing both companies.
As opposed to:
Admin: "There's a bug in the OS, it's corrupting data under these circumstances"
Sun (Or IBM): "Actually the dump you sent us indicate the prob
Re:Nah, this'll never fly (Score:5, Funny)
I admire your optimism. I was young once
There is a lot more margin in services (Score:2)
Re:out of the server market? (Score:5, Funny)
They're also investing in a new line of viagra processors, which promise longer up-time.
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Perhaps its because Sun is already effectively out of the *big*-server market. IBM no longer considers Sun a competitor on the high-end market segment and sees only HP to compete with there. Sun appears to be trying to find a way to find another way of making the revenues they had in the past.
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Maybe you should read IBM's Numa-Q paper that explains why ordinary CPUs don't scale to more than about 30 without the increasing demands of cache invalidations overcoming the advantages of more processors. I think IBM's whole point of starting to put two processors on a die with shared cache is aimed at scaling within that cache invalidation problem. Maybe for cache invalidation purposes the pair of processor (or four, say) can behave like one, and maybe the point of diminishing returns approaches 30 of
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You buy much IBM gear when IBM had that perceived advantage?
You betcha. When you find yourself stuck with a system developed by a team who think that 8000-line EJBs are perfectly acceptable, you better pack on the horsepower. So you send back the pair of 520s [ibm.com] that were originally specced with the system and lay in a couple of fat 595s [ibm.com]. Sure, the bean counters scream, but when you trot out the charts that show system performance tanking around 55-60 requests/second and you need to deliver 200+, it's easy to convince them to spend the money rather than scrap a $13
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Isn't it going to be a hell of a note if all the hardware companies get out of the hardware business and into something like services? Then the only people who will be making chips and boxes will be the Chinese, and their chips will be knock-offs of some retro CPU, such as happened with digital watch chips. The digital watch and clock chips at the low end are all the same, based on the coupla-button LED watches of (when? the 1970s?). Even my moderately expensive vehicle has one of those for a dashboard
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links, references?
Not really mainframes (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not really mainframes. Yes, the IBM / Sun agreement will eventually put Solaris on the IBM mainframe, but more importantly was this bit at the beginning of the article:
So you'll be able to run Solaris on IBM x-series hardware. This is a big deal. While you're unlikely to see big customers migrating their workload off the big systems (E25k, etc) to x-series, certainly you'll have customers moving smaller Solaris workloads to x-series. When you can run Solaris on IBM z-series (the mainframe) then customers can look again to move the big systems to IBM/Solaris.
Wow, it's just so weird to write "IBM/Solaris". :-)
Re:Not really mainframes (Score:5, Funny)
Make that GNU/IBM/Solaris...
Thanks you! I'll be here all week...
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I'd be a lot more interested in seeing Solaris on the P or I series servers. I wonder if that's in the works? Is Sun/IBM considering supporting Solaris on Power? Or perhaps Sun is considering transitioning to the Power architecture? It'd make sense - continuing to develop Sparc is a drain on Sun's resources, and IBM is itching to get Power (and it's der
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see the Polaris [opensolaris.org] site.
Ahem . . . (Score:3, Funny)
hawk, whistling innocently
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On the other hand, Sun is already putting a lot of work into the x64 version of Solaris, because AMD-based systems is pretty much their best profit center. And the Sun/Intel deal only strengthens that. So it's not that much extra wor
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No wierder than it was to write "IBM/Novell" back in the day of things like "NetWare for SAA"...
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Wow, it's just so weird to write "IBM/Solaris"
Well, I've been expecting some form of Solaris on IBM ever since OpenSolaris came out, whether or not Sun was willing to cut a deal with IBM. How much can a Sun x86 Solaris box do that an IBM/OpenSolaris x86 box couldn't? How many Solaris-running SPARCs could be replaced with IBM/OpenSolaris POWER machines (either p or i series), if the price were right? The POWER/PowerPC OpenSolaris porting projects were going to (eventually) make IBM able to compete in Solaris shops that wouldn't dream of going Linux
Not necessarily mainframes (Score:2)
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I have not tried Solaris 10 on IBM hardware, but 8(or 9, have forgot which one) was annoying and really only for die hard Solaris fans.
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Re:Bait-n-switch (Score:4, Insightful)
Since this is
I'm sure...
Your network is made up of hundreds of 16port Cisco hubs and not 9slot Cat6ks.
Your storage sits on internal disk and not external arrays by EMC/HDS/IBM/HP..
You still ride the same 1 gear bicycle you had when you were 6, and didn't upgrade to one with more gears.
10Mb ethernet on coax is still the preferred medium.
Haven't upgraded from linux 2.2 or windows 95.
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I've tried to approach this with an open mind...and I know DB2 will act a 'bit' different, but, man, the shortcomings I see in DB2 are a bitch!! I can't stand it...trying to do simple things are a PITA in DB2 (an example, doing a hierarchical query in Oracle with "Start with...connect by"), and a couple other things I've run into lately.
I hope they don't popularize DB2 at all......I must say I MUCH prefer oracle on a sun box...
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On the other hand, Oracle has things I really like, sequences, consistent read (by far the best of the 3 db's listed), etc.
Another nail in the server coffin for HP (Score:2)
Re:Another nail in the server coffin for HP (Score:5, Funny)
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side note: having used hp as well, i know from using sun/ibm, they also make very decent x86 servers. or you can build your own with barebones tyan boxen. and you can fix it yourself in less than 2 hours (or atleast the team bitch can (teh n00b)
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It sounds like you have never been an admin in a true 24/7 shop where uptime and space are critical.
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The point that I was making is that you cannot go buy off the shelf parts (tyan or not) and have it be comparable to a new DL360 or DL380 from HP. The parent post (GP?) by chef_raekwon was comparing a box he could build with enterprise HP equipment. In this case HP will out preform anything you build yourself from parts ordered from newegg.
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Most annoying HP experience: three-way blamestorm with Red Hat over who supports bonding network connections on a DL580. Red Hat I expect to be shit at service (Red Hat licenses are things you buy to pacify PHBs and Oracle), but I woulda loved to been proven wrong. HP I was thoroughly disappointed by.
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Them:Contact info please
Me:{contact info}
Them:Is this a new or existing case?
Me:new
Them:Serial number
Me:{serial number}
Them:What is the issue?
Me:I have a failed DIMM indicated by a trouble light and system management homepage
Them:Have you tried moving the DIMM around to confirm it is the particular piece of ram?
Me:No, I cannot. It's a production server and I have a limited dowtime window.
Them:Ok, would you like
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Let Jonathan explain the deal (Score:3, Informative)
Keeping Solaris Relevant (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't buy the idea that Sun is looking to bail out of the hardware business. What they are looking to do is keep Solaris relevant. Sun doesn't want you to think Solaris requires Sun hardware. Sun realized that the only option for people wanting to go with x86/x86_64 chips and run a Unix-like OS on supported hardware meant running Linux or buying Sun gear.
Sun is looking to eat some of Linux's lunch. The question is, why is IBM interested?
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This deal gives IBM access to companies that are currently centered on Sun, and Sun is still pretty big.
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The question is, why is IBM interested?
That is obvious - they want Sun's customers. IBM doesn't make any money off of operating systems, they make money off of hardware and support contracts, which is why they have been so supportive of linux. Using an open source operating system decreases their development costs, but more importantly make it easier for people to migrate to their hardware. No one starts off using IBM anymore. They start small with individual servers, then move up to clusters, and when that starts getting out of hand they migra
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They want the financial services market. Really. Major financials I've been in (yes, they're household names) run one of the following:
That's probably the list of servers, in order of decreasing market share. In some of the larger ones, Solaris (both on SPARC and x86) win over Linux, while others have bigger Linux installations. What I haven't seen have been HP/UX. I've seen one financial use AIX boxes, and that was over ten years ago now.
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Disclaimer:
IANALKD, but it sure looks like IBM is pouring a lot of development effort into (big iron) Linux.
Money. (Score:2)
The more choices the customer gets the more IBM consultants/services/support the customer is likely to want/need.
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The Register [theregister.co.uk] suggests IBM is just trying to keep their customers happy.
Re:Solaris is only irrelevant if you play with toy (Score:4, Interesting)
Solaris is a fine OS, and it's got some features that nobody else has. But in some areas it's about 10-15 years behind Linux and BSD. Don't take my word for it - take a look at what Sun itself is saying. [opensolaris.org] Here's a few excerpts:
Solaris installation is ugly, slow, and difficult.
...
We use outdated networking technology (RARP and Bootparams) by default, rather than contemporary network protocols, and thus are often unable to automatically determine configuration attributes that are easily discovered by our competition.
...
We don't include the right set of initial configuration tasks, such as an initial user account, that are commonly provided by competitors. This results in an installed system which boots, and can be logged into as root, but it's then up to the user to hunt around and find a tool (or, more likely, edit the configuration files directly due to our paucity of tools and poor integration of those that exist into the desktop) to create a usable account.
...
One of the significant deficiencies in Solaris compared to our Linux competitors is our ability to easily install additional software after the initial installation.
Well, the good news is that Sun is actually working hard to fix these problems.
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There are obviously areas of Solaris that are few years behind Linux but 10-15 years behind? No a chance. I started on Slackware 96, I spent several years supporting SuSE and I still use Ubuntu. Ubuntu is ahead of most Linux distributions on packaging and drivers and is also slightly ahead of OpenSolaris in this area. The sheer number of ho
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You are correct on that statement, and legally, it is not and never has been. (just in case you were confused).
"Gotta love the Solaris fanatics."
Though I appreciate your distain for Solaris supporters, I really don't think that there is an OS out there that can cliam 'no problems.' Solaris, like BSD, Linux, HPUX, AIX, all have their issues at some point. You also have to understand that linux has not been where it is now. So you have many a serv
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2. I never said that you should replace a working Solaris system just because Linux is faster to install. That would be silly. Disdain for Solaris supporters? Hell, I'm a Solaris supporter myself. What I was talking about is the Solaris fanatics: people who absolutely refuse to acknowledge any shortcoming in Solaris, no matter how glaringly obvious. Every user community has people like that, but for some reason Solaris seems to at
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When a Zone has resources assigned to it, it will then be considered a Container. The Zone itself is based off of a BSD chroot jail though.
Whoever wrote that is incorrect. (Score:2)
Anybody that mentions a GUI at installation time to create users shows that has worked only in small enterprises. The GUI is the graveyard of the efficiency where efficiency is require
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Solaris has a couple of nice features, but the Linux driver issue isn't a problem on servers.
The drivers on Linux that are a problem are mostly on consumer hardware - accelerated video in particular - where manufacturers refuse to release specifications. On server hardware high quality Open Source drivers are available for just about everything so upgrades go very smoothly. Everything "just works". Plus, on Intel hardware, Linux has better driver support than Solaris.
That makes sense since nowadays n
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The distributions and hardware vendors themselves.
It isn't 1995 anymore. There's no way a single vendor like Sun can put more resources into testing than the Linux distributions + all the major hardware vendors (IBM, HP, Dell, etc.).
Rather you should ask yourself, who tests each release of Solaris against all the different hardware out there?
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The installation problems are completely immaterial compared to update stability. For example all device drivers keep working after kernel update because they are both tested and binary compatible.
Driver stability is probably more important than ease of installation, but it's a completely unrelated issue. How can you say that installation is 'completely immaterial'? You have to install the OS at some point, don't you?
ZFS is a nice addition, and so is DTrace, NFS, etc.
I did say that Solaris has features that aren't available elsewhere (I was thinking specifically of ZFS, DTrace and Zones. NFS is a standard feature on every modern OS, so I'm not sure why you mentioned it.)
Adding additional software is now about as easy as in Linux
Now that's just straight-up nonsense. The Solaris packaging system is abysmal.
Actually, yes, it may be your SAs. fault. (Score:2)
Any company investing so much money in new systems (and here, systems should mean the hardware, software, personnel and processes that are going to be followed to work with information) must make sure that the systems are fit for purpose. If so many systems are failing with a given configuration this should have been caught in a pilot deployment. If your SA did not do this or did it but the test were n
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Slashdot posts. Duh.
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Solaris doesn't need any magical enterprise fairy dust to be better than AIX, if my recent experience with the latter is any indication. AIX is S-L-O-W.
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IBM just wants a unix for its systems without having to pay to maintain AIX. That's why they sell systems with linux, and that's why the are going to sell systems with solaris. Its better for them to offer both, so they can get linux business from the idiots who are dumb enough to think IBM cares about open source, and get solaris business from the idiots who think solaris has magical enterprise fairy dust that makes it better.
So... um, what should smart, well-informed people actually choose? I'm actually serious. Is there some other option that people see as superior to Linux OR Solaris for enterprise Unix stuff? I've heard great things about OpenBSD, including its painstakingly good hardware support in some areas, though I have only used it for a couple of months myself, and not in an administrative role.
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Solaris : Applications are written here, and ported elsewhere. It appears to be the defacto king of VAR/OEM software for Unix. Zones: Great, though BSD had 'em first. ZFS: New, but a good start.
AIX: LVM. That's about it. Best disk management tools in the world, and has been since I started using it in 97.
HP-UX: Dogshit. Nuff said.
Linux: The bastard Frankenstein of the Unix world. Runs everywhere, runs reliably (I have
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My manifesto of Unix:
Solaris : Applications are written here, and ported elsewhere. It appears to be the defacto king of VAR/OEM software for Unix. Zones: Great, though BSD had 'em first. ZFS: New, but a good start.
Interesting. I worked in 2001-2002 for a small software company (which had just been bought by a larger company, but that is mostly irrelevant). Our company had developed its products for and under Solaris, exclusively, starting in the early 90s... when I guess Sun offered cheap and good options for developer-friendly workstations. I was in diapers coding in QuickBasic at the time :-)
The company was switching largely from Solaris to Linux and Windows, and there were some bumps (such as the fact that our
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When I worked at Parametric (CAD software), development was mostly done on SGI and Solaris, and then ported everywhere else. No one wanted to touch the IBM or HP hardware.
I far preferred the SGI keyboards myself.
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Actually, Linux from 2000 onward is taking more of Solaris' thunder in the development arena. License costs are cheaper, hardware is more prolific (and cheaper). But no one does development on AIX and ports to Solaris.
When I worked at Parametric (CAD software), development was mostly done on SGI and Solaris, and then ported everywhere else. No one wanted to touch the IBM or HP hardware.
Interesting. I've been in grad school and out of the industry loop since 2003 (hope to get back into it though...). I guess it's no surprise that Linux has taken over.
I can understand why Sun hardware was preferred to AIX stuff, which I've loathed in my brief contact.
I far preferred the SGI keyboards myself. :-)
Hmmm, I've never seen an SGI keyboard. All the ones I find on Google Image Search [google.com] look like standard PC 104-key keyboards. The Sun Type 5 keyboards have a block of 10 or so extra keys on the left, like this [sunstuff.org]. Sometimes I *still* find myself reflexively reaching to the left for my Emacs shortcuts. I have a salvaged Type 5 board lying around somewhere, but sadly there's no easy way to hook it up to a normal USB/PS2 connector :'(
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Do three fictions make a truth?
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Well, that's a dubious proposition right there. Having admined Solaris for 15 years, and AIX and HP-UX for about 8, I consider AIX to be head and shoulders above Solaris. If you look at Solaris 10, it look like it coped a good deal of features from AIX.
Possible Futures of Possible Pasts (Score:3, Interesting)
OTOH, if IBM had bought Apple any of the many times it's been rumored the past decade or more, then Sun might be going out of business right now, without this IBM contract keeping them in business.
Re:Possible Futures of Possible Pasts (Score:5, Funny)
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more like xserves would have no choice but to run Solaris...
With Apple Interface Guis so slick you can skate on them
The Latter:
You'd be hearing about FreeOSX, a competitor to Linux, bsd-derived, anytime soon...
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Fuck you.
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If you spread FUD, you get what you deserve.
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APPLE INC
Market Cap: 101.79B
Cash And Cash Equivalents: 6,392,000k
Sun Microsystems Inc.
Market Cap: 16.68B
Cash And Cash Equivalents: 3,569,000k
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It sounds like the kind of research that Sun would sponsor, to compete with Apple. Run Mac apps on Sun HW, or maybe now on IBM HW in some kind of Solaris/OpenStep "container".
Doesn't add up (Score:1, Insightful)
Yes, if you want Solaris, Sun would be the company to talk to. The fact that they WANT Solaris to run on their machines (not yet mainframes) is the news here, since they've been fierce competitors for decades.
That doesn't sound too likely, with open sourcing the core of Solaris a while back, as
why doesn't IBM just buy Sun? (Score:4, Interesting)
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I've often wondered if IBM would just up and buy Sun, but there's a few reasons I think it would be a poor acquisition. First of all, the past five years or so have proven that the remaining Sun customers will not jump ship just because Sun's not building the fastest or cheapest unix boxes. These customers stick around because, for som
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These customers stick around because, for some reason, they like Sun.
Sun stuff Just Works and it has for a *long* time. I've been around Sun in the workplace since the mid '80s. Except for their desktop stuff which used to be first class [the Postscript interface was a cool idea, but X was available by then and abandoning SunView was a disaster, and I won't talk about the Titanic, I mean CDE], everything else has been slowly improved.
At work I currently have a choice between Solaris, RHEL and Microsoft Windows XP as my primary workstation O/S. I'm using Solaris because a
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I'm terrified to move to Vista. Microsoft finally has invented a decent consumer OS platform in XP, and I'm happy here.
Then again, I can't keep Battlefield 2142 from rebooting my computer every 3-90 minutes.
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* Solaris is good and stable. Userland is horrible, but no-one uses that.
* Solaris is UTTERLY PREDICTABLE and BACKWARDS COMPATIBLE. No sudden changes. If your old SunOS 4 binaries stop working, that's a reportable bug.
* Sun hardware is pretty good.
* Sun support is pretty good. This last is a big one.
Linux is fine, you know. And Solaris 10 feels like a sorta weird GNU/Solaris. If they can pull that off for Solaris 11 without losing their backward com
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That's not really the issue in business. The issue is who's paying the developers and selling support. So s/proprietary// and you still get something IBM doesn't want to foot the bill for: a second flavor of Unix.
Not the first time... (Score:4, Insightful)
IBM still wants to walk away from AIX... hence the Linux support. But I think they realize that there are businesses who are queasy about high end enterprise Linux who will jump all over Solaris, and it's essentially just having to agree to a marketing project now so it's free for everyone...
Sun doesn't want out of the server market. The server market keeps Sun's employees happy and well paid.
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This is dissapointing. (Score:2, Interesting)
hardware. Gee... I learned Unix on a Sparc 2 pizza box. I got to play with Sun E4000 machines,
and later Sunfire servers. I'd like to see Sun Get back into the game.
Re:This is dissapointing. (Score:5, Interesting)
Total marketing non-news (Score:2)
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There's already a sub-project in OpenSolaris to port it to PPC, but from what I've seen, Sun isn't putting too much weight behind it. This deal might change that.
The enemy of my enemy is my friend. (Score:3, Interesting)
Sun has x686 Solaris ports, and IBM's still heavily invested in Inel and AMD hardware, as well as their own Power and Cell CPUs. and SUSE (Microsoft's new best friend) has ports on IBM iron, ranging from tiny stuff up to S390) which I'm sure Sun is jealous of.
IBM, now that SCOx has essentially been wiped from the screen, wants more business, and they don't make that much from Windows stuff. They sell IRON and SERVICES. They stopped operating systems at OS/2 and decided to let others do it. Fine.
IBM has service revenues and gets into a lot of NOCs. They like Linux, 'cause it's all value (read $$) add. They understand iron, they understand services.
The multi-core UltraSparcs are an engineering marvel.... and they're selling like old mortgage debt on Wall Street right now. That silly Linux stuff is pumping it out. Call it a toy if you want, but a bullet is a bullet and if you don't need howitzers, bullets are fine. Add in VMWare, Xen, or whatever, and you have a loaded gun with several rounds in it. That's where servers are going right now: virtual.... and Solaris containers aren't so wonderful.
Microsoft is getting bitten at the ankles by just about everyone. Let's count the ways: uh oh, SCOx will soon run out of money and will stop biting the ankles of IBM and Novell. Pity. Adobe wants to bring an office suite to market. Google hires Sun's StarOffice to be in their bundle. Several companies, weakly but in a virgin kind of way, start selling desktop Linux of various flavors. Microsoft co-opts Ubuntu and makes a slave of Xandros. How silly.
Add to the cake Steve Jobs stealing thunder wherever he can seed clouds. Salt it up with rotten DRM in Vista, and an underwhelming adoption when your server sales are cannibalized by your own inability to ship Windows 2008/Longhorn server.
As Vonnegut might say, Microsoft is feeling the breeze that occurs when the excrement hits the airconditioning. Schwartz is still upwind of that.
Sun get out of the server market?! (Score:2)
What's in it for IBM (Score:5, Interesting)
Disclaimer: I work for IBM.
IBM is becoming primarily a services company, doing systems development, "solutions architecture", and outsourced operations. A LOT of people at IBM are familiar with Sun technology and have used it at one point or another. Heck, most of the Global Services staff that maintain AIX servers also maintain Solaris servers. How hard do you think it would be for IBM to expand their business saying "Sure, we support Solaris. We can build that payroll system that you need for your company on your existing Sun infrastructure. BTW, can we interest you in a new pSeries for these workloads?".
Indeed, this is opening up a new area of the market where they can now claim expertise and recognition. And when the installed customer base is satisfied with what they have, it'll be 10 times easier to migrate their hardware to IBM stuff, and software to IBM proprietary OSes, if there's more profit to be made there.
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Sun is not dropping the server market... (Score:4, Interesting)
No Sun is far from leaving the server market. Very, VERY far.
This is a win for both of them (Score:2)