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


To: Cyrus who wrote (14569)3/2/1999 7:50:00 AM
From: briank  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 64865
 
Sun Microsystems to Distribute Designs Of Chips to Outside Developers for Free

THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Sun Microsystems Inc. plans Tuesday to announce a radical plan for
advancing its microprocessor technology by distributing its chip designs to
outside developers for free.

The move borrows elements of a software-development movement in
which the underlying computer instructions used to create programs is
given away. The Linux operating system and other Internet programs have
spread rapidly through this "open source" process.

Sun, the Palo Alto, Calif. computer maker,
plans to eliminate the existing upfront licensing
fee for its microprocessor designs in hopes of
attracting a broad new community of developers. In particular, Sun aims to
reach academic researchers and startups that couldn't normally afford
Sun's existing fees, which can easily run into the millions of dollars.

Developers who license the technology will be free to modify Sun's designs
and to incorporate them into more complicated chip designs. Companies
that sell products based on the designs ultimately will face licensing fees,
but only when they move to commercial production.

"The idea is to put state-of-the-art technology in the hands of the
innovators of the world, in a business model that allows them to quickly
innovate without a lot of cumbersome legal and financial details," said
Marge Breya, Sun's vice president of marketing and business development
for microelectronics. Under this new model, "there can be very fast, rapid
innovation" in chip design, she said.

Sun first plans to release the design for its PicoJava chip, intended to help
programs written in Sun's Java language run faster, later this month. It will
follow by releasing designs for its line of 32-bit Sparc microprocessors this
summer, and the 64-bit line of UltraSparc processors by the end of the
year.

Advocates of open-source software say it produces better technology in
less time. Linux, in particular, has been tweaked by a world-wide
community of software hackers.

Sun appears to be the first major chip maker to extend that concept to
microprocessor designs, which are frequently guarded like state secrets by
their developers. Analysts said they weren't aware of any other major chip
makers that have distributed their core chip designs as freely as Sun now
plans.

"It is certainly revolutionary and radical," said Michael Slater, principal
analyst at Microdesign Resources, a research firm. "It's a clever ploy for
getting a whole lot of attention."

While Mr. Slater said he was unconvinced that Sun's new model will have
much impact on the broader microprocessor business, other analysts
praised the effort. "It's a brilliant move by them, one that will certainly
spread their technology far and wide," said Will Strauss, an analyst with
Forward Concepts, a Tempe, Ariz., market-research firm.