To: ericneu who wrote (31522 ) 11/2/1999 3:44:00 PM From: Jim Lamb Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74651
Sun's new Solaris takes aim at Microsoft By Stephen Shankland Staff Writer, CNET News.com November 2, 1999, 12:05 p.m. PT In a jab at its rival Microsoft, Sun Microsystems will unveil its newest operating system for general use the same month that Windows 2000 makes its debut. Sun will unveil the new Solaris 8 OS in February, Sun said today. On February 17, Microsoft introduces its much-anticipated, much-delayed Windows 2000, formerly called Windows NT. Solaris 8, the new edition of Sun's version of Unix, will become generally available that month, said Tom Goguen, a product manager for Solaris, in an interview with CNET News.com today. But Sun is trying to prime the pump with a new program: Starting November 27, anyone who is so inclined will be able to begin beta testing on Solaris 8 for a cost of about $25. Quote Snapshot SUNW 103.88 -0.06 MSFT 92.88 +0.50 SCOC 13.25 -0.31 HWP 73.00 -1.62 CPQ 18.88 -0.56 Enter symbol: ú Symbol Lookup More from CNET Investor Quotes delayed 20+ minutes The timing of Sun's Solaris announcement isn't coincidental, said Jonathan Eunice, an analyst with Illuminata. "It's a poke in the side [at Microsoft]," he said. Indeed, Sun chief operating officer Ed Zander said that Solaris 8 is "years ahead of NT," in a conference call last month. Future Sun server computers using the company's upcoming UltraSparc III "Cheetah" chips will use Solaris 8, he said. The rivalry between Sun and Microsoft is growing more entrenched. Sun is a wholehearted backer of Unix, an operating system that predates Windows but which has grown more popular with its use in Internet applications. Microsoft Windows' origins lie with personal computers, but Microsoft came up with Windows NT as a way to attack Unix. Though Windows NT servers sell well, most analysts agree that it hasn't come close to displacing Unix. Microsoft executives were not available for comment. The cultural divide between Windows and Unix is deep. Windows, which ships on millions of desktop computers, is easily recognized and relatively familiar to lots of people. Unix, in comparison, has deep roots in the Internet and ties to the hard-core programming community, but it's less well known to the average user. Unix, though, has fragmented into several versions from Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Santa Cruz Operation, SGI, Compaq Computer, Sun, and others. And the Unix landscape has been turned upside-down with the arrival of Linux, a clone of Unix that's available for free or very low cost. Unix is much better than Windows NT at running big servers and handling heavy computing loads than Windows NT, Eunice said. "The Unixes are all very comfortable with 16-processor and 32-processor environments," he said. "It's gotten to a very high level of scale. NT hasn't gotten to that plateau." But in time, NT likely will catch up to where Unix is today, he said. And Unix advocates should be familiar with NT's underdog status, Eunice said. "Big scale is genuinely hard. That's a reality that Microsoft will overcome in 2003, 2004, or 2005," he said. "NT is a decent operating system. It has its good parts. But implementing at scale is ten times harder than most people realize," Eunice said. Sun began beta testing the new version in September.