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


To: Marc Hyman who wrote (54572)6/13/2003 2:49:28 PM
From: Lynn  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
Well, Marc, the article does provide a partial answer to my earlier question:

"There are some 100 million Java-enabled cell phones worldwide, but the amount Sun earns from licensing the software - somewhere in the tens of millions, according to strategist Tolliver - barely helps its bottom line."

wired.com

Now to finish the article. My comment so far? SUNW sure sounds like high risk investment.

Lynn



To: Marc Hyman who wrote (54572)6/13/2003 6:18:35 PM
From: Brian Sullivan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
Too true

Not long ago, Sun was celebrated as one of the Four Horsemen of the Internet. Companies looking to make their mark on the Web knew exactly which vendors to seek out: Cisco for routers, EMC for storage equipment, Oracle for database software, and Sun for servers - those centralized computers that pump out every page on the Web and every piece of email. And while Cisco, Oracle, and EMC have struggled through the downturn, none of the three has suffered nearly as much as Sun. Like all great rise and fall stories, Sun's saga is one replete with hubris, missed opportunities, and outright mistakes. But the story reduces down to this: McNealy spent the second half of the 1990s monomaniacally obsessed with everything having to do with Microsoft, from its monopoly-like practices to the general unreliability of the Windows operating system. Meanwhile, stalwarts like Hewlett-Packard and IBM began selling servers on par with Sun's most powerful and expensive machines. Dell and Intel, propelled by Linux, started cutting into Sun's core business at the low end. By the time Sun woke up to this new reality, the smart-guy pundits were asking if the company would be the first big casualty of Linux.

wired.com



To: Marc Hyman who wrote (54572)6/14/2003 11:41:55 PM
From: Charles Tutt  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
Has the Wired article been edited? I went back to reread it, and couldn't find a paragraph I thought I remembered in it about no non-monopolist having enough cash to buy Sun. Or was that a different article?

Charles Tutt (SM)