Sun Microsystems Inc. , facing slowing growth in its core server market, is turning itself into a data storage shop, a senior executive said on Friday, confronting skepticism that the network computer maker could successfully shift into a new area. Denise Shiffman, vice president of storage marketing, said in an interview that the company was having some success with its T3 storage system, which has been out for less than a year. "We are winning a lot of big deals," she said. "It is an extremely profitable, fast growing product line for Sun." Sun has been one of the fastest growing companies in America in recent years, cashing in on the drive by companies to network their companies and hook up to the Internet, but the demise of the high-flying dot-com sector and corporate caution on spending due to the U.S. economy have hit demand for servers. Once a second thought, storage has become the new hope for fat profits in the technology sector as the corporate world invests in equipment to keep tabs on every customer and partner and spur growth by moving business and management to the Web. While there's plenty of skepticism that Sun can challenge storage leader EMC Corp. , Shiffman says Sun learned to play a new game in the early 1990s, when it switched from powerful workstation desktops to Internet-building servers and championed its message: The Network is the Computer. "I was here when we were a work station vendor and we had to change to a server vendor," Shiffman said. "We are doing that again around storage, and we've been doing it for a while. "It (the T3) is a core element of our strategy and vision of open storage networks that are modular, highly scalable and highly managed."
SUN A TARGET OF COMPETITORS Sun traditionally sold storage to its server customers, and the easy pickings has helped make it a target of competitors. About half of Sun's storage sales are disks attached to computers, but such systems can create network bottlenecks as the central server computer with unique access to data does double duty sending information and keeping the network humming. Many say the solution is to hand over storage management duties to purpose-built machines or storage networks, an elegant response which turns out to be a technical challenge. Critics say Sun doesn't get it yet. "They (at Sun) think of storage as a peripheral," Dan Warmenhoven, the chief executive of Network Appliance Inc. , which makes stand-alone products, said recently. Merrill Lynch financial analyst Thomas Kraemer said Sun's T3 was not good enough. "We continue to like Sun's server position, but storage matters more," he said in a Feb. 21 report. "The increasing demand for storage, and Sun's weakness in this area, is really coming back to bite them now." But Sun's share of global storage sales grew last year to 10.4 percent of the market from 8.7 percent and the T3 has been purchased for use with non-Sun servers, Shiffman responded, declining to give T3 sales figures or examples of wins. Customers want "one throat to choke" when they have a problem to fix, she says, and Sun can provide that without taking over the entire computer center. Systems specialists rather than storage specialists can link all the equipment behind a particular program, she said. "We are not trying to say that customer environments are going to be homogenous, because they are not," she said. But if a single database or program runs on a system that is all from one vendor -- for example Sun -- theoretically it is all bound to work together. "They need to know end to end that thing is going to work, and when it doesn't they want to make one phone call," she said. Sun also works with a service companies that resell Sun products to users, who can also become the "throat", she said. Much of the value, and profits, in storage has moved to software which manages these information beasts, and Sun appears to be heading for the throat of top storage software vendor Veritas Software Corp. . "Sun's been trying to engineer Veritas out," Gary Bloom, chief executive at Veritas said at an investment conference recently. In particular, Sun has bought two data management software companies in the last half year, LSC Inc. and HighGround Systems, Inc., although Bloom said they were not enough: "I just don't think it is going to help them." Sun competes and cooperates with Veritas in various areas now, and Shiffman said Sun wanted to continue the relationship. But she also envisions stand-alone Sun storage management software that could run on non-Sun systems. "This is a software revenue business," she said. ((Peter Henderson, San Francisco Bureau 415 677-2578 peter.henderson@reuters.com)) (Reuters 08:57 PM ET 03/16/2001) |