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Technology Stocks : All About Sun Microsystems -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: uu who wrote (34303)8/23/2000 11:24:59 PM
From: Michael F. Donadio  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 64865
 
Hi Addi,

I know you have a good grasp of these issues and I would be interested in any comments you might have about the accuracy of some of the assertions in this article. I emboldened the part that I was particularly interested in. Is a win for MSFT's .Net initiative capable of "taking over the internet", IYHO of course, or is that just hype?

Sun Cranks Up The Heat
By Deborah Gage, Sm@rt Partner
August 22, 2000 5:18 AM PT
URL: zdnet.com

Sun Microsystems is leading the development of an open-systems competitor to Microsoft
.NET, Bill Gates' sweeping initiative to deliver software as a set of services over a wide range
of Internet-connected devices. Gates claimed in June to be betting his company on Microsoft
.NET, a move he deems as important to Microsoft as the transition from DOS to Windows.

At the core of Sun's counterplan is StarOffice, the Microsoft Office competitor that Sun
acquired one year ago. But Sun's success also depends on its ability to forge relationships with
key members of the open-source community, which can help supply additional technology and
create an infrastructure for developers to continue improving it.

"Microsoft .NET is bigger than the Win32 application programming interfaces--it's the biggest
thing Microsoft has ever done," says Marco Boerries, who founded StarDivision as a teenager
in Germany and became Sun's VP for Web-top and application software after Sun acquired his
company. "If Microsoft .NET wins, Microsoft will take over the Internet. It's a bit of a revival
of what they tried to do with MSN."


Boerries has made a career of battling Microsoft and claims to spend "several hours a day"
studying Microsoft .NET. He already has revealed some pieces of his own plan but says there
is more to come. Last month, Sun promised to make StarOffice available under the GNU
Public License (GPL) on Oct. 13. Unlike Sun's Community Source License, the GPL is
well-accepted by open-source developers and appears to have boosted Sun's credibility as an
"open" vendor. "I'm very optimistic," says Michael Meeks, a principal with Helix Code, which is
working with Sun.

Sun also named several Linux and PC vendors as distributors and OEMs for StarOffice, and
last week donated parts of StarOffice to the Gnome Foundation. The Gnome Foundation is
attempting to deliver a single-user interface across Linux and Unix, much in the way that
Windows 98 and NT share the same user interface.

Boerries says Sun considers Gnome technically superior to the KDE Linux desktop and also
will make Gnome the Solaris desktop. Sun expects Gnome to stave off Linux's inroads into
Solaris market share and also improve the usability of Sun's workstations, which Boerries says
is still a large and profitable business.

Will Sun Rise Above The Challenges?

Observers applaud Sun's moves but say the company faces challenges. Dan Kusnetzky, a VP
at International Data Corp., calls Microsoft .NET Gates' latest attempt to "embrace and
extend" the Internet in reaction to the rise of browser-based applications, which threaten to
render much of Microsoft's software irrelevant. He also expects Microsoft to hit snags
converting its revenue from packaged software sales into software rentals.

Nevertheless, Kusnetzky says Microsoft's superior tools and its integrated products are an
advantage. "Microsoft will tie things together into one environment with point-and-click, and
with the linkage to Windows 2000, you'll get it all," Kusnetzky says.

Boerries believes Sun and its allies have three years before Microsoft releases a good working
version of Microsoft .NET. "Microsoft will pursue this and eventually get it right-we see them
as a strong player, but we don't want them to be the only player," he says.

Boerries no longer urges customers to dump Microsoft Office for StarOffice; he encourages
them to try both, expecting to win converts by designing software for the Internet and giving
much of it away to stop Microsoft .NET in its tracks.

Pieces Of The Puzzle

The Gnome cross-platform software push includes:

Mozilla browser technology
GNOMEOffice from openoffice.org (StarOffice)
SashXB (tools) from IBM
Nautilus (file manager) from Eazel
Graphing and financial data handling from GnuCash
Evolution (calendaring and messaging) and Bonobo component model from Helix Code
Frameworks and services for Internet devices using Linux with help from Compaq
CORBA, support for distributed software from RedHat
Printing, internationalization and accessibility technology from Sun


All the best,
Michael