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


To: Urlman who wrote (11240)10/6/1998 1:07:00 PM
From: The Ox  Respond to of 64865
 
New Sun Software Delivers Personalized Webtop Computing From Any Internet-Connected Device

PALO ALTO, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 6, 1998 -

Sun To Provide Webtop Access to Email, Data and Intranet Applications

Anywhere, Anytime From Any Available Computer

Sun Microsystems, Inc., Monday (Oct. 5) announced a software technology for Information Technology (IT) managers and Internet Service Providers (ISPs) that provides a cost-effective way to deliver fast, secure access to the corporate intranet from any Internet-connected device. Information, applications, internal Web sites and network services - everything that is normally available to end users on their corporate intranet - will soon be available from anywhere at anytime through new technology, code named the "Sun.Net Strategy" that will change the way people work.

Sun also announced today the acquisition of i-Planet, Inc., (see release dated 10/6/98) a privately-held company specializing in secure Internet communications solutions.

Innovative secure remote access software from i-Planet, RemotePassage, will be a core element of the Sun.Net Strategy.

"This new technology will provide a secure, cost effective connection from the public Internet to a user's personalized Webtop, without the costs normally associated with building a virtual private network - it's true ubiquitous access to corporate IT resources and your virtual enterprise," said Dr. Stuart Wells, senior director of Sun's Network Software products. "'Sun.Net' is running internally at Sun as a pilot project and has significantly lowered remote access costs while providing support for a distributed workforce of 8,000 employees."

Beyond providing employee access, this new software will allow companies to create on-demand extranets for providing secure, direct access to customers, partners and the supply-chain to the corporate intranet, without the additional hardware and networking costs currently associated with extranets or dedicated VPNs.

The Sun.Net Strategy includes RemotePassage(TM) technology as a core element which provides the secure, encrypted tunneling over the Internet. A key benefit of the technology is that proprietary client software is not required to make a secure connection because a Java applet is downloaded on-demand at time of access, allowing any available Internet-connected device to connect securely with the corporate intranet. Security is provided through Secure Socket Layer (SSL), RC5 technology and Diffie/Helman encryption. This solution will work as an additional security layer with any existing VPN or security infrastructure that a company has deployed.

The Sun.Net Strategy also provides for improved performance for low speed users by automatically compressing files before downloading over the Internet or by sending files directly from the server. Truly heterogeneous, the software can access files or applications running on Solaris, Windows NT, Novell, IBM AS400/3270 systems and any UNIX-based file system. Because the RemotePassage technology resides at the network transport layer, Sun.Net will be able to provide detailed, centralized logs that describe every activity of every Internet user - perfect for audits, internal chargebacks, or customer billing.

"Sun.Net" will be available in the first quarter of 1999. For more information visit www.sun.com/sun.net.

About Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision, "The Network Is The Computer(TM)," has propelled Sun Microsystems, Inc. (NASDAQ: SUNW) to its position as a leading provider of high quality hardware, software and services for establishing enterprise-wide intranets and expanding the power of the Internet. With more than $9 billion in annual revenues, Sun can be found in more than 150 countries and on the World Wide Web at sun.com.

Sun, the Sun logo, Sun Microsystems, Solaris, Sun Internet Mail Server and The Network Is the Computer are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries.

CONTACT:

Sun Microsystems

Mary Camarata, 650/786-8645

mary.camarata@sun.com



To: Urlman who wrote (11240)10/6/1998 8:06:00 PM
From: bob  Respond to of 64865
 
ALL,

Here's another story on the demise of Sun's Java Chips:

Java chip not picking up steam
By Michael Kanellos
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 6, 1998, 3:05 p.m. PT
URL: news.com
update The Java chip, according to some, is toast.

The much-publicized embedded processor family from Sun Microsystems that was designed to make the Java programming language a standard feature for set-top boxes, cell phones, and other Internet appliances appears to be on its last legs, according to Jim Turley, embedded processor analyst for MicroDesign Resources.

Java will come to these devices--but just not through Sun's chips, because no one seems interested in Java chips based on Sun's designs, he said.

QUOTE SNAPSHOT
October 6, 1998, 1:00 p.m. PT
Sun Microsystems Inc. SUNW
41.7500 +1.7500 +4.38%
> more from CNET Investor
> Investor message boards
Quotes delayed 20+ minutes
Sun hotly denies this contention. Licensees have produced samples of the Java chips based on Sun's designs, an indication that commercial products will come out. Sources in the chip industry have generally confirmed this.

Still, no products have been announced, and the company most likely to produce chips for sale, Sun, won't. Sun will release a sample of the MicroJava 701 next week, the first public release of the Java processor based around Sun's designs. Sun, however, is now stating that it will not make or market Java chips, or consign production--as it does with Texas Instruments in the case of Sparc processors for workstations and servers.

Instead, it will design Java processors and let its licensees manufacture the chip.

"We have strategically altered our direction to focus on the technical foundation rather than coming out with CPUs," said Harlan McGann, head of the architectural and technology group in Sun's Microelectronics division. "It is a pretty highly customized market and we're not set up to deliver 1,000 variations of a chip. We will leave the actual implementation to the licensees."

The current state of the chip's prospects contrasts strongly with its past, albeit largely abstract, glory. When Sun announced the Java processor line in 1996, Java was an untested, but exciting concept.

To ensure that the programming language would gain popularity, Sun said that it would develop a chip, then called "picoJava," that would efficiently run Java in set-top boxes and the like. Sun initially said it would both make the chip as well as license the design. Large chip vendors, including IBM, LG Semicon and Fujitsu signed up as licensees.

The licensees, however, have been "suspiciously silent," said Turley. "What he is really saying is that there is no demand for Java chips."

The chip family's demise largely comes down to a mismatch between the chip's design and the needs of device makers.

As designed, the Java chip is a costly and consumes lots of power, especially in comparison to other embedded chips based around designs from MIPS and Advanced Risc Machines.

The MicroJava 701, for instance, needs 3 watts of power to work, said Turley. StrongArm chips, by contrast, use one-third of a watt and are made on a production process that is one generation behind. Arm and MIPS chips are also cheap. Low-end versions start at $9. The Java Chips will likely cost more, especially if vendors have to use customized versions. Even McGann admits that customized chips only begin to pay for themselves when quantities get into the "hundreds of thousands" range.

In addition, Arm, MIPS, and other embedded chips already adequately support Java. As a result, the licensees have little motivation to make a Java Chip design as device manufacturers can now get Java support with the more generic chips.

"It's not fast enough. It's not cheap enough. It's not any of the stuff they thought it would be," said Turley.

In a much publicized demonstration, Scott McNealy showed off a ring that contained a prototype of a Java chip embedded in a ring. When pointed at a car, the ring would unlock the car door.

PicoJava 1, however, never came out. Before chips based around the design came out, Sun announced picoJava 2, which is the core technology for the MicroJava 701. To date, licensees have not announced chips based around the picoJava 2 core.

McGann, however, says it is a mistake to interpret the silence as a defeat. "We have seen working silicon from licensees," he said. Additionally, Sun has a team of engineers working on picoJava 3, which will be the core for successors to the 701. Sun's own version of the 701, however, is a "proof of concept." Next week's sample will not come out as a finished product.

In addition, Sun is developing a new generation of embedded processors based around its UltraSparc II chip, according to other executives at Sun. Sun will license this design to other vendors, any may sell the chip under its own name.

Looks like the worlds only java native processor is now
available from PATRIOT SCIENTIFIC CORP. Due to its unique
stack and register based architecture, it runs programs in C and
FORTH as well as Java.

Cheers,

Bob