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Sun To Sell Linux PCs

Rubbersoul writes "Reuters.com is reporting that in "a bid to undermine arch-rival Microsoft Corp" Sun is going to jump into selling low cost Linux PCs. The article is a bit low on technical details, but is interesting none the less. Also if you take this new news with a story from yesterday about Sun pushing StarOffice for schools around the world, you really start to get an idea that sun wants to beat MS like a red headed step child ..." An editorial in the WorldTechTribute argues that Sun's education-market giveaway is exactly the sort of behavior that Microsoft has been attacked for in the past.

392 comments

  1. Why Sun? by ichimunki · · Score: 1

    Why should I wait for Sun when I can buy from Pogo Linux today? Seriously. I will be buying new system in the next few weeks, so I've been looking around. Any reason why I might wait for Sun's offering?

    --
    I do not have a signature
    1. Re:Why Sun? by peterpi · · Score: 5, Insightful
      You, dear slashdot reader, should not buy a PC from Sun.

      You are no doubt quite capable of buying the parts for, and assembling, a custom PC. You can install and maintain a linux distribution.

      The people who should buy from Sun are (and i quote) markets such as corporate call centers, government and schools. These are the sort of folks who don't have a clue how to run their PC's. More importantly, they don't want to have a clue how to run them either. They expect their computers to Just Work, and for someone to come fix it damn quick if it breaks.

      This is exactly the sort of thing Sun excels at.

      Best of luck to them.

    2. Re:Why Sun? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think this is intended for a home-user desktop, but for a workstation alternative that comes with support from Sun to work with thier servers.

      More like :

      "OK so you want 2 E15k's, a v880, some Sun storage, oh and we'll throw in some Linux workstations for ya."

      Sun is certainly not trying to break into the desktop market.

    3. Re:Why Sun? by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 2, Funny

      Oh, he doesn't even need to build it himself.

    4. Re:Why Sun? by peterpi · · Score: 1
      Perhaps that's Sun's secret cost-cutting strategy?

      They're screwed now that's public knowledge!

    5. Re:Why Sun? by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1

      Damn, I was going for a Funny mod and you made an even more funny statement out of it. Soon we will see a Sun-Lego merger in order to get a steady supply of cheap workmanship!
      Question is: how will they call themselves? LeSun or SunGo ;-)

    6. Re:Why Sun? by Osiris+Ani · · Score: 1
      Why should I wait for Sun when I can buy from Pogo Linux today?
      Frankly, there's little reason, probably even as far as Sun is concerned.

      I think the simple point is that they don't want you to buy Windows. If they sell Linux boxes to anyone, it represents potentially fewer desktops upon which Windows appears, and as a result, fewer profits to Microsoft. Remember, many, many people are into having a big name behind their hardware and software (hey, even I have a particular fondness for the HP Kayak), and it's becoming more and more difficult to purchase a name-brand PC that doesn't automatically include a fee for a Windows license, even if you just want it to run some other OS... any other OS. Microsoft's bullying tactics against hardware sellers tend to be very effective. Sun cannot and will not be pushed around by them, because they don't rely on any deals with MS simply to stay competitive, unlike most other PC vendors.

      Similarly, Sun's view of Star Office is equally pragmatic. Fewer purchases of Microsoft Word translates directly to less cash in Microsoft's coffers. That means less R&D money, less advertising money, and hopefully less leverage against competitors, hardware vendors, and consumers.

      Yes, it is known that Sun is rather keen on Linux, but largely as a sales tool that will steer market share away from Little Blue.

    7. Re:Why Sun? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      haha, I guess Microsoft shareholders must be selling as we speak, worried about getting "beat like a red-headed stepchild". I think the only thing that will get beat that way is java as people start to realize the immense superiority of .NET.

    8. Re:Why Sun? by morgajel · · Score: 2

      I like how you said "dear slashdot reader" rather that you blithering fricking dolt!"

      it shows a sort of compassion that most of us lack in.

      ok, now for my two cents. The commentary on the article hinted that Sun is no better than microsoft in their actions towards the school. well, I have a few thoughts on that.
      1) star office is based off of openoffice IIRC. that means that there will be some underlying compatibility. Obviously sun could try to scew the openoffice people, but they'd get their balls slapped for sure.
      2) if sun wants to do this, good! I'd rather have two behemoths duking it out than one just mowing down the competition. if Sun was smart, they can raise their "look, we're Mr. Compatible and open(sorta)" flag. this will put microsoft on the spot.

      or course I'm just a blothering fricking dolt, so who knows.

      --
      Looking for Book Reviews? Check out Literary Escapism.
    9. Re:Why Sun? by grumpygrodyguy · · Score: 1

      That's really cute.

      --
      The government has a defect: it's potentially democratic. Corporations have no defect: they're pure tyrannies. -Chomsky
    10. Re:Why Sun? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pogo linux systems aint cheap either...

    11. Re:Why Sun? by krasni_bor · · Score: 1
      The people who should buy from Sun are (and i quote) markets such as corporate call centers, government and schools.


      I just bought a web server for my school from Dell (I didn't have any choice) with linux preinstalled. I suppose I thought it would feel more like a Mac--like the hardware and software would feel more tightly coordinated, in comparison to all the thrown together Linux pc's I've used.


      It doesn't. It works, but it doesn't feel like it was made to run Linux. From reading the mailing lists, it seems like if a Linux driver breaks in the current version of Red Hat for a given piece of hardware (like when moving to the 2.4 kernel, for example), they will still ship the server with the broken driver preinstalled. I would pay more for a server that felt more unified and solid, which I had been figuring would mean OS X servers, but perhaps Sun can fill that void.

    12. Re:Why Sun? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lesungo Microsystems Group

    13. Re:Why Sun? by lostchicken · · Score: 2

      I'm a slashdot reader. I've built by own computer.
      And you're damn right I want my computer to just work.
      I want someone to come quick when something breaks.

      Not software wise, I'll do that myself, but most of the parts you'll buy at Fry's for your homebuilt computer won't put up with the abuse that my 12 year old SPARC 2 will. It's been running almost non-stop since it was made, and not a single part, from the fans to the power supply has failed. And if it ever did break, Sun would send a field engineer out (for a price, of course) to replace whatever went bad.

      This is where Sun excels. They build expensive computers that have excellent support, and will run forever.

      --
      -twb
    14. Re:Why Sun? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it was bound to happen. Talk about grasping
      at straws..

      While the idea of a low-cost x86 branded Sun desktop does have some status appeal, its likely that Sun will blow it again.

      Why?

      Well setting aside the normal MS/intel/cheap PC DIY dribble, Sun has it's own internal faults that will make it fail like everything else low-cost they have attempted in the past.

      Things like:

      1) An expensive dinosour Sale force that has
      HUGE veto power over marketing, PR, and Sun
      management (thank you Fast Eddie Zander) They
      have the blood of hundreds of good products
      on their hands!

      2) Sun NEVER gives strong fiscal backing to
      any of it's new technology which isn't core
      server or Solaris. They starve new
      technology until they bring money in. They
      underfunded Java for years before it made it.
      They almost lost it in the process along with
      it's key inventors.

      3) Sun has NO marketing. Most stratagies are
      hashed out by management or empire building
      directors trying to get a VP title. Once they
      make thier personal goals the ignore the
      technology. Sun is filled with empire
      builders and YES men.

      4) Sun PR is a JOKE. Their idea of product
      promotion is a PR newswire. For the longest
      time they wouldn't allow specific products
      being shown in ads. They only ever wanted
      to make Sun visable to Wall st. to boost the
      stock price.

      5) Sun under designs it's hardware. It's planed
      by commitee, goverend by schedule, and
      changed by clueless management. The
      customer is RARELY in mind when products
      are designed.

      Sun is a victum of it's own successs. Ego's and
      moron's over the Dot Com years have been slowly
      rotted a once-great company into the shell it
      is today.

      In their wake lies great idea's and products gone
      bad like the 386i, Solaris x86, Javastations, Sun Ray, and soon Sun Low-cost linux desktops...

      What a waste..what a crime, what a shame.

  2. Sun's education-market giveaway by BlackMesaResearchFac · · Score: 1
    Looks like Sun has adopted the "if you can't beat'em, join'em" philosophy.

    It's difficult not to say, good for them.

    --
    -- Scientist: You aren't going to leave me here, are you? Boagh! Thump...
    1. Re:Sun's education-market giveaway by y_a_duck · · Score: 2, Informative

      Perhaps most /.-ers are too young to remember that Apple gained much of its popularity by donating massive numbers of Apple IIs to schools. It worked, for awhile.

    2. Re:Sun's education-market giveaway by BlackMesaResearchFac · · Score: 1

      Is your point that Sun's effort will likely only have a short-lived impact?

      That may be true, but there is a difference between, back in the day, being locked into entirely different hardware (Mac vs PC) & the software that goes with it vs. just switching ones Office software.

      --
      -- Scientist: You aren't going to leave me here, are you? Boagh! Thump...
    3. Re:Sun's education-market giveaway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When Microsoft 'gave away' Internet Explorer, they had a monopoly. ÿHaving a
      monopoly is not in and of itself illegal. ÿUsing certain tactics to maintain
      and expand that monopoly is. ÿIt has been ruled that the way they 'gave away'
      Internet Explorer was illegal.

      Sun on the other hand, does not have a monopoly. ÿThey hardly even have a
      foothold in the education market (with the exception of computer science
      departments).

      It is not hypocritical, therefore, for Sun to decry the illegal practices of
      Microsoft while using the same practices in a way that is not illegal. ÿAn
      analogy that fits the situation quite well would be:

      We both have a baseball bat in our hands.

      You are swinging your bat at a baseball.

      I am swinging my bat at someone's head.

      Would it be hypocritical of you to object to my actions?

    4. Re:Sun's education-market giveaway by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      And Apple still has a proportionally larger market share in education than it does in the general market.

      The iMac sold quite well in the education market, enough for them to make the eMac.

    5. Re:Sun's education-market giveaway by ripewithdecay · · Score: 0

      And you know, I think my old elementary school still has those.

    6. Re:Sun's education-market giveaway by BlackMesaResearchFac · · Score: 1

      No. That's why I said "good for them."

      --
      -- Scientist: You aren't going to leave me here, are you? Boagh! Thump...
  3. low cost? by pixelated77 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Low cost hardware doesn't sound like Sun's schtick, now does it?

  4. Yeah, right by Lolaine · · Score: 1

    Sun selling >low cost things???, uhm, oh yeah.
    Looking at their prices on their web site I cannot imagine what low cost means to them :)

    --
    ------- The last Sig. got fired.
    1. Re:Yeah, right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe low cost means $20 for Solaris 9 for i386?

    2. Re:Yeah, right by Lolaine · · Score: 1

      Low cost means $0 for software (as it was with S8).

      --
      ------- The last Sig. got fired.
    3. Re:Yeah, right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and $1K for blade 100/150s for academic pricing.

    4. Re:Yeah, right by squiggleslash · · Score: 2
      Solaris, with oodles of goodies, is sold by Sun for the princely sum of $45, or $20 if you're willing to download it over a broadband link. My jaw dropped when I got the so-called "media pack" through the mail, thinking I'd just get a multi-CD jewel case with some CDs in it. It's rather more than that...

      Their low end workstations, Sun Blade 100s and Sun Blade 150s, start at about $1100, and you can get a pretty nifty one for not a lot more. That's quite reasonable, you can't get an expandable/modular Mac for that amount.

      (Oh, and I'm being scrupulously fair. Sun will tell you the former is "free" and latter is "$999" omitting the "handling" charge in the former and compulsory non-included keyboard purchase in the latter. I can't say I approve of their telco like "honest" pricing but the prices themselves are perfectly reasonable.)

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    5. Re:Yeah, right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what is low cost? Sun's stock price (SUNW for those unfamiliar). Trading near its all time low, it has made a new 52 week low pretty much every day for the past consecutive 8 days. In fact, in that same time period, its lost at least a quarter of its value. Maybe this move signifies a turning point for the company, i dont know, but as the nasdaq's most widely held/traded stock and at $3 a share, it would make a lot of people very rich if it went up even to an eight of its sept 2000 highs. but that just wouldnt fit today's economy, now would it? On a different note, if you happen to own EDS, then i hate to break it to you but it will be down like $13 when the market opens up tomorrow morning. Turns out, no matter how many 5 billion dollar navy contracts they get, they just cant seem to get anything right.

  5. Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Sun has gone the route of trying to sell low-end desktops to push an agenda (promote Java, dethrone MS). They haven't had good luck in this market.

    What compelling reason is there to buy a Sun box over a the umpteen beige box vendors, IBM, Compaq, Dell, etc? Linux is only part of a low-priced solution. Does Sun think they can make a box cheaper than Dell?

    1. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Schmerd · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No, but I'll bet they can provide better Linux support than Dell.

    2. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sun has gone the route of trying to sell low-end desktops to push an agenda (promote Java, dethrone MS). They haven't had good luck in this market.

      What compelling reason is there to buy a Sun box over a the umpteen beige box vendors, IBM, Compaq, Dell, etc? Linux is only part of a low-priced solution. Does Sun think they can make a box cheaper than Dell?


      I think they would do it just to increase the size of the market for linux machines. The more that people do it, the greater chance one of these computer makers will make it big time, then everyone will do it. This will finally force Microsoft to just selling their OS alone, and maybe make them actually push for OSless machines. Whatever the case, this will decrease the Windows market share, and allow Sun to sell more variety of products based on linux even if their machines only sell as much as they do now.
    3. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Telastyn · · Score: 2

      More likely it'll just be the finance guy wanting to only use one vendor. Sun does make better servers than dell (generally). If you're forced to make the choice in a company, would you rather have better servers or better desktops?

    4. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by FeatherBoa · · Score: 5, Interesting
      What compelling reason is there to buy a Sun box over a the umpteen beige box vendors, IBM, Compaq, Dell, etc?

      Well, Sun has not had to cut a deal with Microsoft in order to remain in business. If there's money to be made (different question entirely) from "major vendor" boxes for running Linux, Sun's in a position to exploit it. The "umteen vendors" have all sold their first-born to Bill.
      Yes, you can buy no-name, but some people need/want to buy name-brand and Sun is a name-brand that is conveniently immune to Microsoft's interference.

    5. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by asteinberg · · Score: 1
      The difference between your thinking and Sun's is in the way that you are evaluating success. You say:
      They haven't had good luck in this market.
      but how do you define "good luck"? It seems that you think good luck means selling more boxes than Dell, Compaq, etc. However, this is where you're wrong. Remember, you said that Sun is trying to "push an agenda". Well, in order to push this agenda, they don't have to outsell the big boys, they just have to help establish that there are legitimate alternatives. The more people see Office suites that aren't made by Microsoft or computers that work great that don't have Windows, the more people will begin to realize that there is a reason to adopt the open standards that Sun is pushing.

      So basically, perhaps what you consider a failure, Sun would consider a small (but important) step forward toward legitimacy and therefore openness.

      --
      The first ever Ultimate Frisbee video game: here (now
    6. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sun will sell you a lovely lilac/grey box. Now as we all know that is way, way cooler than beige.

      FooBar

    7. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2
      but how do you define "good luck"?

      Uh, lets see, sales??

      I'm willing to concede my point if you can provide a statistic for their SunRay boxes that isn't asymptotically approaching zero.

    8. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by sterno · · Score: 2

      There was an article a while back that really showed that Sun is in a very bad position. I forget the details of it, but the gist of it was this.
      If you look at the technology they are working on, they seem to be at odds with themselves. They are developing cross platform software, and they are giving it away mostly for free, while they are trying to make money on selling a specific hardware platform.

      Their software model, by most accounts makes it harder for them to differentiate their hardware. Their strategy is really the "get microsoft" approach, and they seem to be little concerned about the long term implications of their choices on their own business.

      --
      This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    9. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 2

      Also, the finance guy has HEARD of Sun in the corporate marketplace, and it does not come with the new MS licensing scheme. That scheme was a big deterrent to the company I work for. Most finance guys won't buy white box or home-use computers, but they'll approve a name they've heard of in the corporate arena.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
    10. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by tweakt · · Score: 2
      What compelling reason is there to buy a Sun box over a the umpteen beige box vendors, IBM, Compaq, Dell, etc? Linux is only part of a low-priced solution. Does Sun think they can make a box cheaper than Dell?
      Dude, Sun boxes are cool, then come in sweet colors, and have cool names like Onyx and Oxygen...

      Oh wait, I'm thinking of SGI ;-)

    11. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by asteinberg · · Score: 1
      but how do you define "good luck"?

      Uh, lets see, sales??

      You're missing the point. Sun can benefit from this even if it does not sell tons of units (and, *gasp*, loses money). The long-term benefits of showing that there are legitimate alternatives to Microsoft are more important to Sun. I hate to use a cliché, but Sun is clearly trying to invest in a future.

      --
      The first ever Ultimate Frisbee video game: here (now
    12. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I read that article. He misunderstood Sun, and so do most people here. Surprise Surprise, nobody here thinks about the Enterprise (no, wait, thats on tonight).

      The reason to buy Sun is mostly 'Sun Service'. You buy the huge mission critical box, and then for a hefty sum each year, you get access to their hotline and (depending on how much you fork over) between 2 and 4 hour turnaround on replacement parts.

      Java helps sun in a number of ways:

      1. Large java apps typically run best on Sun servers.

      2. Everyone else in the java market immediately grabs on and adds all kinds of proprietary extensions (Oracle, Microsoft, IBM) so that you are locked in. The only safe play is to stay with pure java, ie. Sun.

      Java, of course, has problems. Sun can't design a GUI system worth crap. Remember OpenLook? But the fundamental principles are sound.

      Will, by Sun selling linux boxes, they eat their own lunch? No. Why, they already did eat their own lunch by overselling to dotbombs and everyone in the late 90s - there's a glut of high end sun hardware out there - still - thats not being used to capacity.

      And if linux boxes start to take off in the enterprise, well, sun will have to enter the space anyways. Its called a hedge in gambling.

      Sun needs this to fill out their role in the enterprise - consider that IBM can show up and provide full top (datacenter) to bottom (pcs & handhelds) all under one brand, from one provider (not that I'd want to pay those prices, but when your needs are huge, the cost of coordinating 17 different vendors might be substantially more than IBM's prices).

      The javastation was a halfhearted attempt to do this - they found out the hard way that most job functions actually do use word and excel (not that they necessarily should, but they do). So staroffice and linux become their approach to this problem. I'll be curious to see what changes they make to linux when one of these boxes shows up at my office.

    13. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by n9hmg · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I'll give you a compelling reason. Sun will do a standard set of hardware, optimize the OS install for that exact platform, with sensible defaults and and easy configuration. Corporations will be able to just buy a box and have a good working system, no problems with the video card of the day the vendor sent not being supported by the current distribution, compile a custom kernel for it, then keep track of it in case of a future reinstall. If Sun changes the hardware, it'll also support it.
      I love Linux. I started using it 9 years ago, almost to the day. Yet, one of my major headaches in my job is answering questions from people who are trying to take advantage of the superiour OS, but don't have the background to make it work.
      Ok, so you can't run calibre. Are you on a Sun, or an HP?
      Linux
      OK, What kernel version?
      I don't know
      type "uname -a" and tell me what it says
      It says "youname: command not found"
      Really? what's your $PATH set to?
      I don't know
      ok, type "echo $PATH"
      It just comes back to a prompt
      Ok, what's the system name, I'll telnet in, and see what I can see.
      linux
      ok, what domain is it in?
      what do you mean?
      Is it linux.company.com, or what?
      I suppose
      Ok, what is the IP address - just type /sbin/ifconfig -a".... what user are you logged in as?
      root
      so none of your user setup scripts are being run for you anyway. Let's try logging in as yourself - you can just "su - username"
      su: user username does not exist
      Ok, have you set up NIS?
      What's that?

      After digging down through all this stuff, teaching enough unix to make it so I can get into the system. I go to the website for their particular distribution (I'm a slackware man, myself), and start learning the management interface
      If it were a defined platform, the user would have set the box on his desk, followed the instructions, and been up and running, and I could go right in and tweak things like NIS and automount, instead of starting from scratch on each box.
    14. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by mrobinso · · Score: 0

      > Sun is a name-brand that is conveniently
      > immune to Microsoft's interference.

      Wow, Microsoft should put you on a retainer PDQ.

      Sun has spent extraordinary amounts of time,
      energy and money explaining to juries and judges
      that they are in fact NOT immune to that
      interference. .mike

      Sorry for being offensive.
      Ok. I'm not sorry.

      --
      -- Karma whore? You betcha. --
    15. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by thayner · · Score: 1

      Companies that have Sun servers are going to want to have Sun desktops, there is a strong, generally even true, perception that Sun is going to provide better support then some random company. Not to mention other percieved benefits such as being a larger Sun customer, one that Sun will offer lower prices and better service to.

    16. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dude, that is pretty weak technical support. if you're going to do that, you need to realize that to be effective you need to talk to them on their level of familiarity and intelligence. example:

      Ok, so you can't run calibre. Are you on a Sun, or an HP?
      Oh you are having trouble with your program? What brand is your computer?
      Well the label says HP...
      OK, What kernel version?
      Do you know what version the kernel is? No? Ok, no problem, just type "u" as in under and "name" all together and then space and then "-a" and lets see what it says.
      etc...

      The people you talk to don't want to be impressed by your overwhelming intellect. They just want your help. You don't need lots of technobabble to make yourself look smart.

    17. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      His point is that this isn't the first time that Sun has tried cheap clients to get at Microsoft, and coincedentally sell more servers. They tried several generations of JavaStations and SunRays, the last few looked pretty cool, and were competitive with PCs for initial hardware cost. None of them sold well, even with Sun selling them at a loss. However, I think the problem here is that over their life, 20+ PCs cost less to maintain than a single server. Even if the maintenence is self done by users, or a MCSE TP diploma type. While the Sun solution might result in a better system, it looks to be more expensive at the onset, so few businesses even consider it. That being said, I have always liked their idea of a card that carries all of my settings from terminal to terminal.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    18. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by zanerock · · Score: 1

      Recall that Dell has gotten out of the budget PC market. As far as I can tell looking at the Dell price sheet, it's not really that hard to make a box for less than Dell, even with some support thrown in (which Dell doesn't *really* provide much in the way of in any case). Dell made their name in selling low-cost, moderate quality boxes, and is now coasting on that image. It's really not their business anymore, though.

    19. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, he may be a COBOL programmer -- he's got it in his (mangled) e-mail address. If so, he needs to do SOMETHING to make himself look smart.

    20. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Frequanaut · · Score: 1

      oh, your such a smart tech-savy user support person. Those other people are such idiots..

      *haw* *haw*

      *yawn*

      Arrogance is not a trait for successfull support.

    21. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by AlexMax2742 · · Score: 1
      What compelling reason is there to buy a Sun box over a the umpteen beige box vendors, IBM, Compaq, Dell, etc? Linux is only part of a low-priced solution. Does Sun think they can make a box cheaper than Dell?

      No. But Sun is a pretty big name, and I suspect that people WILL buy them because lets face it, a lot of people know the name, even if they were never sure what exactly they did. IBM got away with it, why can't Sun?

      --
      I'm the guy with the unpopular opinion
    22. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like Apple has done since inception. And the reason that OSX and the BSD kernel work so damn well.

    23. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by ipjohnson · · Score: 1

      I don't think he was really making fun of people but more pointing out what WILL really happen.

    24. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by haggar · · Score: 2

      Exactly correct!

      The much-maligned (by Slashdot) Sun is in the unique position to actually sell a Linux workstation on a large scale, something NONE of the other vendors could afford without kissing goodbye a good chunk of their revenue.

      Said all that, I must add that I really like my Blade 100 running Solaris.

      --
      Sigged!
    25. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Tony-A · · Score: 2

      Corporate desktops. Sun quality and support. Not to be confused with the WalMart $200 specials. Price and perceptions will to a surprising extent determine the value that the customers expect and will get from it. Even if they were functionally equivalent, a business will get more useful results from Star Office on Sun desktops than they would from Lindows running on WalMart computers. "I paid good money for the thing. Now make it work."

    26. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Fjord · · Score: 1

      I also read that article and at the time agreed with it but now sort of disagree. The fact is that they can't just ignore MS. As more and more software gets released for that platform, more and more customers will go to it. I could understand MS not liking Java comoditising the operating system because they gain by the status quo.

      Sun has been doing things to try to make itself the viable choice in a commodity market. They market towards TCO in large businesses, with SunRays and minimizing administration, but businesses aren't going to use Sun hardware regardless of lower TCO if they don't have the software they want.

      --
      -no broken link
    27. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by rseuhs · · Score: 2
      Does Sun think they can make a box cheaper than Dell?

      Well... Yes!

      Sun doesn't have to pay MS-taxes. Sun has more Unix/Linux-knowhow and does not have to rely on a Linux distributor.

      They can make both cheaper AND better Linux boxes. - If they want to, which remains to be seen.

    28. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of us who work at Sun are linux-heads anyway. We use Solaris for work and Linux for home. And we find lots of niches for linux at the office, too. This has been the way for *many* years. You could say this is a bottom-up movement. Sun doesn't have to train tech support to understand and use linux. Not just because employees already know Unix inside out, but because we also know linux inside out from our own personal experience.

      Getting our own linux distro is like candy to us. I'm thrilled, even if it doesn't sell gangbusters. And the fact that we have so many great software packages to fit on it (from web and email servers to NAS and proxy servers and LDAP servers) with full support and a vast array of hardware setups that we can support gives Sun a massive edge.

    29. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Sparkle · · Score: 1

      Those who do not learn from history...

      Remember back in the early 90's a brash Novell CEO thought he would kick some M$ backside? Novell bought arguably the world's finest word processor (WordPerfect Corp.) and put together a suite with Quattro Pro and some Paradox for a data base.

      M$ sunk WP into near-oblivion and Novell took a blood bath when they sold it to Corel.

      While I certainly wish Sun well, I will not be placing any bets on the outcome.

    30. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      Dude, what kind of people come to you for support? The ones who can't figure it out for themselves. No one's going to pay me $75.00/hour to show me they know how to set up their system.

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    31. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, there is no SGI Oxygen, there's Onyx, Origin, Octane, O2....and that's just the O's

    32. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where was the arrogance? I've known people who've been that out of the loop for support that I've had to walk through while sitting next to them at their computer. This doesn't mean they are stupid or that I'm smart, it just means that I know the system and they don't. Isn't that what support is supposed to be about?

      His suggestion was merely that with a brand name, standardized machine and software combination that there are more known quantities.

      If every door in your house used a different and distinct latch mechanism, lever on this one, combination lock on another, "keyless" RF, laser encrypted key, plain old doorknob, privacy lock, bar across the door, etc. then how convenient would it be to go pee in the middle of the night? You'd eventually learn your way through but it would never be as intuitive as if all your doors had the same latch, whatever it might be.

    33. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Robert+The+Coward · · Score: 1

      You have never done support have you. I do both windows and mac support and when I ask some users what version of windows they replay windows 97 because the installed office 97 on top of there windows 95 or 98.

      By the way who is more arroganent you because you think you known what support tech go thought or this guy who was repeating what is probly a common call for him.

    34. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Frequanaut · · Score: 1

      mmm, thanks. I've been on both ends of the support nightmare.

    35. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by n9hmg · · Score: 2

      Thanks. I don't mean to insult them. The people I have in mind are all highly-intelligent engineers. They aren't sysadmins, just like I'm not an engineer. However, they know read enough to know that they can dramatically improve their productivity with linux. However, since there is no corporate solution provided, with a standard platform (OS+hardware). So, they're going out and trying to do it themselves, and find themselves in the same situation I would be in if i decided to design an ASIC.
      If there was a good standard system I could recommend to everybody BEFORE they start trying to put something of their own together, they'd have something which I can fully know what it is, what can go wrong with it, how to configure it, etc., and I could get them going and they could get back to designing chips.
      As it is, so far, we the experimentation has mostly been done by people with some previous unix admin experience (their own linux boxen, mostly), so I just give small bits of help - how to make a kernel here, now to set up automount there.... However, as this goes on, and these guys are breaking the rules (IT management would prefer the engineers use drawing tables and abacuses (abaci?)) and getting full round of synthesis, place&route, and extraction done in one day when it takes 3 days for everybody else, everybody's wanting in on it. The correct answer in my job is to tell them that it's not supported and that they're on their own. Unfortunately for my career and workload, I still have a soul and a minimally functional brain, so more and more of my time is eaten up, mostly now by people outside my division, who are trying to do their jobs better. Maybe, if Sun comes out with a good platform and a good implementation of the OS, without jacking themselves up into Dell-level pricing, I can get IT to accept it as a standard, and get these people proper support.
      Sure, If I were still delivering pizza for a living and hacking on my pc in my spare time, I'd be pissing and moaning about a big company trying to take over my private geek hobby. I no longer have that luxury. My one misgiving about this, though is the cost issue mentioned above. The systems we're using in this site cost about USD 2100, with dual Athlons and 4GB of ECC ram, ordered from Monarch, I believe. We acquired them with the connivance of a clueful higher manager, who let us expense them, like office supplies. Our company has a close business relationship with Dell, and any formal PC hardware purchase must be made from them. The Dell equivalent to our systems costs around USD 8000. I'd hate to think what Sun may want for these systems.

    36. Re:Good for linux(?), probably not good for Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You LIKE the blade 100? I had the misfortune of having one on my desk at work over a year ago, and it was probably 3x slower than the $800 linux box sitting next to it. That was then, unless they're putting USIIIs in there now, the difference has only gotten far worse.

  6. Hmm.. by ZeroConcept · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "argues that Sun's education-market giveaway is exactly the sort of behavior that Microsoft has been attacked for in the past.:

    A few differences:
    - Sun has not been ruled a monopoly
    - Sun is not trying to give away free things to schools as a sanction to being ruled a monopoly
    1. Re:Hmm.. by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 2

      but, just like Microsoft (and anyone else who ever gave anything they produced to schools) they are being accused of the underhanded business practice of getting people to use your equipment, and then hoping they will buy some for themselves when the time comes.

      Oh my god, you're a functional business!
      You Bastards!!

      --
      That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    2. Re:Hmm.. by ILikeRed · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't forget the most important difference - Sun's gift is not proprietary, so the schools can access their documents without Sun software, and hire 3rd parties for support, updates, and improvements

      --
      I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress -J Adams
    3. Re:Hmm.. by msobkow · · Score: 2

      Sun giving away StarOffice for education is more of a public relations ploy than anything else.

      The vast majority of StarOffice code is actually the OpenOffice base, which is free to _anyone_? All that comes extra with StarOffice is a few fragments of functionality that can't be distributed as open source because it is owned by companies other than Sun.

      IE, on the other hand, was (and is) an entirely closed source base that cannot be obtained (legally) from anywhere except Microsoft and it's partners.

      It's also important to note that "free" IE is only available for download to run on systems running Microsoft's own OS products, which are _not_ free. If WinXX were free, and Microsoft were giving away IE to educational groups but charging the general public, you would have a fair comparison, but as it stands your comparison is just a red herring.

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    4. Re:Hmm.. by geekoid · · Score: 2

      And sunb Isn't giveing things away, ony to charge them a hefty liscens for new products once there old ones become entrenched.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:Hmm.. by RestiffBard · · Score: 2

      as I recalll Apple did the same thing many moons ago. You youngsters might not remember this but there was a time when the only computers in a school were Apple computers. IIes I think. It doesn't seem that did much of a difference for them in the long term.

      --
      - /* dead coders leave no comments */
    6. Re:Hmm.. by tshak · · Score: 2

      So it's okay to have aggressive practices until you are ruled a monopoly? So, go ahead and use MS tactics - just slow down when you approach 80% of the marketshare. MS wasn't always a monopoly either, you know.

      --

      There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
    7. Re:Hmm.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Part of that is also due to the general clunkiness of the machines of the time. There was no reason to have any loyalty to a machine or OS because none of us in school at the time had anything to do with them that would expose us to anything specific to that setup. I still remember having to more or less boot into whatever program it was that you intended to run.

  7. SUNW getting creamed by kootch · · Score: 2

    They're losing ground in the server market, have priced themselves out of all competition, and now they're going for the education market?

    Hmmm, I think it's a hopeless cause for them.

    Getting into the education market is putting them between two highly competitive companies: Apple and Microsoft. Additionally, they're trying to get into the cheap pc market and compete against eMachines, Dell, Gateway, etc.?

    Sounds to me like they feel left out and are trying desparately to get their stock price out of the gutter without any original ideas.

    1. Re:SUNW getting creamed by christophersaul · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Nonsense.

      Excellent and growing market share in the Unix and enterprise server market, have just released an excellent little Linux server, have clear differentiation over the Linux story that other vendors push, fantastic developer support and great Unix experience, with all the Unix expertise and services that make big, worldwide companies buy from large vendors like Sun.

      Sun is more than just hardware. You need people to advise, set up install. I doubt these low end Linux PCs are aimed at the general consumer, but at the customers coming to people like Sun and saying 'help us get rid of Microsoft on the desktop'. Sun Ray are often a good solution, particularly for call centres and similar enviornments.

      Think of a large company with 10000 PCs, that is seriously considering a move to Linux on the desktop. If they're going to do it, they need to do it through a big vendor, who is more than just a box shifter (Dell) or a vendor who backs off their support to tiny companies like Suse (IBM).

      This is a market Sun need to be in, because if they don't sell the kit, someone else will.

  8. Rvials by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    a bid to undermine arch-rival Microsoft Corp"

    All I want to know is which is Professor X and which is Magneto.

    On a side note anybody ever play Arch-Rivals in the arcade> Best basketball ever.

  9. First on topic post!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    If Sun put a mainstream distro, (preferably Redhat), on the machines it'll be successful.

    If Sun put CowBoyNeal's version of Wine, running on Foobar Linux, under the Bochs emulator, which is actually running on Plan-9, installed on an ESDI hard disk, with no PCI bus, but EISA instead, and 30-pin SIMMs, and everything installed via a PERTEC interface tape drive, then it won't be very successful.

    I just wonder which option they will go for. Unfortunely, the second option seems to be the preferable choice for a lot of system builders who ship Linux!

    1. Re:First on topic post!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After reading this, I imagine whatever install they ship will have some special sauce added.

  10. This signals the end for Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No good has ever come out of Stanford. Nothing.

    1. Re:This signals the end for Linux by ekrout · · Score: 1
      --

      If you celebrate Xmas, befriend me (538
    2. Re:This signals the end for Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell, I remember when yahoo had a "stanford.edu" URL.

  11. SUN shines by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the article: "Sun is engaging in behavior that is exactly what it so vehemently opposed just a couple of years ago and continues to oppose. Not only is Sun Microsystems losing $5.7 billion in potential revenue by giving away StarOffice 6 to foreign schools they are also losing any credibility with their investors."

    So? Didn't they do that by creating OpenOffice? Where was the harsch criticism from their investors. IIRC, Sun's argument over the years has always been - what hurts Microsoft is good for SUN. SUN shines!

  12. FUD by Blob+Pet · · Score: 1

    Sun's giveaway of Star Office is not the same as Microsoft's giveaway of IE. With the case of IE, Microsoft bundled its browser free with Windows in a manner known as comingling (sp?), gave it a prominent placement on the desktop, and tried to prevent Netscape from being preinstalled.

    --
    "...today consumers have been conditioned to think of beer when they see a bullfrog..."
    1. Re:FUD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And... I don't recall SUN ever being found guilty in a federal court for abusing monoply power. I think this makes a big difference.

    2. Re:FUD by abigor · · Score: 2

      Also, by giving away StarOffice, Sun is promoting an open document standard. The KWord team, for instance, has hinted they are moving to adopt the OpenOffice document format. When MS gives away something, it's to advocate a closed format that only their tools can operate on. On the other hand, anyone can write a word processor (or whatever) to open StarOffice files.

  13. Level playing field by babbage · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Sun's education-market giveaway is exactly the sort of behavior that Microsoft has been attacked for in the past.
    Well yeah, but Sun ain't a monopoly. That changes everything. I don't think anyone would object to giving material to schools if all other things were equal, but when a company in Microsoft's position does it then the action can fairly be described as an illegal extension of their monopoly powers, whereas if Sun does it that criticism doesn't work.

    Moreover, what is Sun talking about giving away here? Linux machines? Java tools? StarOffice? Sun isn't exactly the only provider of such technology, so even if the giveaways propel adoption of these technologies, their open nature means that this won't necessarily translate back to their bottom line. On the other hand, for every PC Microsoft gives away it'll be running Windows [money back to themselves], it'll probably be running Office [money back to themselves], and maybe it'll have Visual Studio [money back to themselves]. None of these are open, none of these have significant competition. If they get people using such technology, there's only one vendor supplying it.

    Please compare Apples to Apples or, in this case, Suns to Suns.

    1. Re:Level playing field by babbage · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Good lord if I'd realized that the site I was replying to was the Fox News of tech news sites then I wouldn't have bothered. What awful tripe.

      Too bad sites can't be moderated as -1 troll... :-)

    2. Re:Level playing field by azimir · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Just so you know,

      StarOffice was already free for educational institutions, site liscence and all. We love it here and more and more of our people are using it. It costs us less to deploy each copy, both monetarily and time-wise.

      If you dig around the educational parts of Sun's website you'll find much of their sofware is already very cheap for schools.

    3. Re:Level playing field by Arandir · · Score: 3, Funny

      Well yeah, but Sun ain't a monopoly. That changes everything. I don't think anyone would object to giving material to schools if all other things were equal

      Somewhere during the early to mid 1990's...

      Salesman: I'm sorry Principal Cleaver, I can't donate any more copies of Windows for your school.

      Principal: Why? Last week you set up Jefferson High with a new computing lab!

      Salesman: That was last week. This morning some lady in Colorado purchased Windows. That took us over some arbitrary number of users, and now we're a monopoly. We can't do any good deeds anymore. You must now pay full price for Windows because our CEO's wallet is getting thin.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    4. Re:Level playing field by junkpunch · · Score: 1

      but when a company in Microsoft's position does it then the action can fairly be described as an illegal extension of their monopoly powers

      How is this an "illegal extension of their monopoly powers"? I'm intrigued.

    5. Re:Level playing field by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How come that fair.org page you reference doesn't have a big page on it anywhere hammering Dan Rather for his liberal bias?

    6. Re:Level playing field by egomaniac · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Oh yes, I'm sure that's an accurate description of Microsoft's altruistic intentions. I can't imagine that, say, driving Apple out of the education market by giving away free stuff had anything to do with it.

      Think of the children. Microsoft certainly is. They're future customers, after all.

      --
      ZFS: because love is never having to say fsck
    7. Re:Level playing field by PainKilleR-CE · · Score: 1

      How is this an "illegal extension of their monopoly powers"? I'm intrigued

      Some people believe that by giving computers (and software) to schools Microsoft is extending their monopoly into another market. The reason, of course, is simply because in the past Apple has dominated that market, and it was viewed that this was one of the few ways Microsoft could actually gain market share there.

      Of course, the implication is that the market actually exists in the first place. In my experience schools (other than colleges anyway) rarely actually buy any computers or software. They simply use what's been donated to them until it stops working. The grade school I went to had a lab full of Apple II computers for at least 10 years.

      --
      -PainKilleR-[CE]
    8. Re:Level playing field by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Liberal basis is what rational human beings call
      objectivity.

    9. Re:Level playing field by jasonditz · · Score: 2, Funny

      The store I worked at once gave 10 watermelons to a church. Was that an anti-competitive practice?

    10. Re:Level playing field by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do you hate America so much?

      Unca Donny Rumsfeld told me that if you question things that you hate America.

      W.

    11. Re:Level playing field by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Easy: AMERICA SUCKS!

      America is the perfect argument against a capitalist economic system. Instead of the people controlling the government, the corporations control the government.

      That's why the government has to control corporations; to ensure freedom for the public at large.

    12. Re:Level playing field by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 3, Insightful
      It's fine to give things away in order to receive goodwill. And of course pure altruism is also fine. The real problem is when you give someone a gift that is meant to trap -- and it doesn't matter if you are a monopoly or not.

      The problem with Windows give-aways is that they close off other avenues of computer knowledge that a person might otherwise find. For instance, Windows uses its own terminology in many places for no good reason (for instance, calling hyperlinks "shortcuts"). I feel this is a specific attempt to miseducate people so they have difficulties with other environments.

      Other companies do this too. AOL does it all the time, crippling their users understanding of how the internet works (while pretending it's because they want to make the internet easier). Many companies use binary formats meant to trap data. The MS Visual development tools trap developers, but a lot of other development environments have tried to do the same thing. There was a time when Troll Tech was using Qt in the same way (though they've thankfully reformed). Maybe this is a form of "leveraging", but I don't keep up on the subtleties of business lingo.

      When someone gives away a product like this, it is not charity. It is just a loss-leader (and with software, there often isn't any real loss involved). It doesn't matter if you are a monopoly or not -- a loss-leader isn't charity, and the receiver should be suspicious. Microsoft receives extra scrutiny, because they have sinister intentions (as has been evidenced many times over). Sun can be sinister too -- their management of Java in particular, but that could certainly extend into other areas.

      But maybe not. I don't think StarOffice is a loss-leader, nor much of Solaris (it is too similar to other Unices). They may be looking solely for goodwill, or they may be competing with Microsoft -- they can compete through giving without committing the same sins.

    13. Re:Level playing field by ethereal · · Score: 1

      That was also the case at my grade school; it is no longer the case in large or wealthy school districts around the country, though. Education IT sales and service is becoming (has become) a big business.

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

    14. Re:Level playing field by Arandir · · Score: 2

      It was Apple, after all, who started the whole process of giving away computers to schools. Where the kids future customers of Apple? Looking at the market share today, the answer is no.

      So why will giving away free Windows make future Windows users, but giving away free Apples in the past didn't make future Apple users?

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    15. Re:Level playing field by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what's particularly funny? I'm in the SF Bay area, Silicon Valley and the elementary school 2 blocks from my house has a hodgepodge of donated Macs, 2 iMacs they bought, one to run the slapped together network in their lab/library and the other as the sole connection to the internet in the teacher's lounge.

      They are still accepting anything you're willing to donate because they are so desperate to try and get support. In the same district a couple of miles away from here is an elementary school with fully networked classrooms with at *least* one recent model Mac per room for gradekeeping, etc. and a real lab or recent Macs and PCs.

      Why the difference? There is no "district" IT budget. It's all about whether you have a rich neighborhood or not because parents don't contribute to the district, they contribute to their school. This means that anyone who is lagging in funds will do so more or less permanently as they can't attract richer students to a poorer school.

      Living in the Mecca of IT, one would think that we'd have figured out some sort of infrastructure that would allow schools to at least be networked within the district, if not getting useable machines into classrooms and labs at *all* schools in the area.

    16. Re:Level playing field by grmoc · · Score: 2

      Because Kids like to play games, and Apple made the "Why shoot yourself in the foot when you can aim for the head" mistake of deciding to actively discourage game-makers from making games for the platform.

      What made computers fun? Games! Not WordPerfect or M$ Word! People didn't buy apply because they couldn't play doom on it.

      As always, IMHO.

    17. Re:Level playing field by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Doom wasn't even written yet at the time Apple was giving away computers to schools.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    18. Re:Level playing field by grmoc · · Score: 2

      So you're telling me that apple came out with the apple-II sometime after Doom was released?

  14. It's competing against IBM by mbkennel · · Score: 2, Insightful



    for contracts where they supply a server and then N cheap boxes, i.e. glorified terminals, running something or other.

    Basically it's the Sun Network Computer except now it runs linux and it has email and word processor, and so the people with them don't feel like they were given the gimpiest computers.

  15. You're so stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sun has their own Linux distro, dumbass.

    1. Re:You're so stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the fact that they have their own distro got to do with anything?

    2. Re:You're so stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was in response to this:

      "If Sun put a mainstream distro, (preferably Redhat), on the machines it'll be successful"

    3. Re:You're so stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, well so what? Just because they have their own distro, doesn't mean they will ship it.

      Does IBM ship OS/2 on all it's machines?

    4. Re:You're so stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes.

      Get fucked, plz, thx.

    5. Re:You're so stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ouch! Comparing anyone or anything to OS/2 is mean and spiteful.

    6. Re:You're so stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      did you read this guys' post? or do you just enjoy posting idiocies?

    7. Re:You're so stupid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean, 'yes'? How many adverts for an OS/2 machine have you seen in the last year?

  16. Sun to have something to do with Linux, maybe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...in some sort of way, except when it's not as profitable as doing something with Solaris, unless of course the open source card can be played with a definite Linux angle (but not simultaneously in other cases), however this does not automatically fail to include those cases in which advocacy of Linux is not a positive hindrance to revenue generation with regards to Sun's market strategies, official and unofficial, including but not limited to sales of hardware and software. Thanks for clearing that up (again).

  17. Wonder what they will be like? by ACK!! · · Score: 2

    Will they follow the Cobalt Cube approach since they already have it or will they go another route?

    The Cobalt Cube looked very cool in their little blue cases. I did not see in the article if they were going to be intel or sparc based.

    I am not going into the basic Wintel bashing stuff but I hope it does well simply because it gives consumers more choices even if those products are focused primarily at educational and corporate users.

    ________________________________________________ _

    --
    ACK /ak/ interj. 2. [from the comic strip "Bloom County"] An exclamation of surprised disgust, esp. i
    1. Re:Wonder what they will be like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did not see in the article if they were going to be intel or sparc based.

      Using intel/athlon chips instead of their own sparc line? Now *that* would be ironic, wouldn't it?

      On the whole, I'm not very impressed with the Ultra-Sparc chips. Modern day intel chips clobber the ultra-sparc IIi chips as compiling large apps at work versus at home has clearly demonstrated to me. I doubt that they'll stick the Ultra-III's in. I'd still rather have an athlon or pentium at the end of the day. The sparc chips are way behind.

      I'm also not impressed with Sun's video cards & video architecture. I mean, my desktop colors *still* bleed out.

  18. Sparc or x86?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone know?? A cheap Sparc box might be cool, but I'm not going to waste my money on something I can put together myself for half the cost.

  19. Microsoft is Laughing by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sun's obsession with Microsoft doesn't hurt Microsoft, but it is going to kill Sun. While they are busy wasting all their resources "fighting" Microsoft (a company not even in the same market as they are for the most part), IBM is going to squash them on the high end, while Intel finishes taking the low and medium end hardware from them.

    1. Re:Microsoft is Laughing by pretzel_logic · · Score: 1

      I do not agree, I think that this is dirt in the eye of Microsofts long term goals. When Sun donates 220 Million copies of Star Office to the children, they are going to learn what they are given. Schools, (usually in a tight budget) may use the free tools. If this occurs, in 10 years, no one will no how to program the Microsoft OS that a mere 400 developers have access to (source). I dont know how to program a TRS-80. Its more like 20 year old though. I see Suns stock going up, due to sales increase, because people generally purchase what they know how to use. The price is fair, the development options are endless, and computing can get back to what it was supposed to be, before the huge Microsoft distraction. The bottom line is cost versus productivity versus reliability.

      --

      pretzel_logic
    2. Re:Microsoft is Laughing by badzilla · · Score: 1

      >Sun's obsession with Microsoft doesn't hurt Microsoft, but it is going to kill Sun

      The exact same obsession did bad things for Novell...

      --
      "Don't belong. Never join. Think for yourself. Peace." V.Stone, Microsoft Corporation
    3. Re:Microsoft is Laughing by Frequanaut · · Score: 1

      It's been said before in this thread, but you're right.

      When did crushing microsoft become a valid business model?

      If thats the best option someone has to offer, they're in trouble. Hopefully, crushing microsoft is just a nice side effect.

  20. how else do you compete? by greylouser · · Score: 1
    is Sun hypocritically hoping to create an illegal monopoly of their own by giving StarOffice 6 to students for free?

    There's no hypocrisy here. They're not trying to create an illegal monopoly, they're trying to find ways to compete with an illegal monopoly that hasn't been punished. If circumstances were different, and there was already intense competition in the market, I'd be extraordinarily suspicious of this tactic. As it is, I think this is legitimate.

  21. Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Related story over at MarketWatch:

    http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story.asp?guid=% 7B DD0D026F%2D26DC%2D4106%2DAE5F%2D614C8FE431B1%7D&si teid=mktw

    I really liked this quote from a so-called analyst:

    "I don't get a sense that anyone wants a Linux PC, PCs are coming down in price and it's hard to see how Linux is going to make the PC that much cheaper."

    Some people just don't get it. Sigh.

    1. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by foobar104 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I guess I don't get it. How is Linux going to make the PC cheaper? Or are you just talking about the cost of purchase, not the TCO? In the enterprise, Linux is more expensive to run on the desktop than Windows is, because the most basic tools for Windows (Outlook, for one) don't exist in a usable form on Linux.

      I don't think Sun is trying to sell computers to home users, here. I think we need to be thinking about how Linux fits into their enterprise computing strategy.

    2. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is Evolution not usable?

      Evolution

    3. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by kaiidth · · Score: 1

      Sod that.

      How is Linux going to make the PC cheaper? Or are you just talking about the cost of purchase, not the TCO? In the enterprise, Linux is more expensive to run on the desktop than Windows is, because the most basic tools for Windows (Outlook, for one) don't exist in a usable form on Linux.

      Okay, I've heard some bullshit today but this comment is utterly priceless. You really claim that:

      1) Outlook is the most basic tool for windows

      2) Outlook has no Linux analogue

      and 3) The TCO of Linux is higher because it has no Outlook???

      You're a dreamer, you are. That's precious.

      Now if you'd said 'a decent GUI based file manager', that might have been different.

      I'm now expecting an essay validating each of these points, please. Particularly interesting to me is your explanation as to why Outlook requires automatic execution of unsigned scripts from untrusted sources in multiple languages. Also, the exact cost of all the email viruses associated with Outlook use compared to those of every other mailer (TCO does include all that time spent dealing with virus infestations, you realise? And the money/time from all that virus scanning requirement. And so on). I'd also like you to explain to me how, if Outlook is a necessary 'basic' tool for 'the enterprise', how all those other companies that go for Lotus solutions, or indeed pure-Unix solutions, manage to survive. I worked for years at an R&D centre that used nothing but Suns. Gosh, no Outlook! No WINDOWS! How did we survive? Discuss.

      If you really believe that Linux makes PCs more expensive, I'll tell you what, we'll test it. My father and I use Linux, my mother and little brother use Windows; I'll record the time I spend doing tech support on each of them, and if Windows costs less time for me than Linux, I'll pay you. However, based on last year, with three serious Windows file corruptions, trojans, and Sircam (bro' disabled the virus checker on Windows because 'it works faster switched off', and started using Outlook instead of the slightly safer alternatives because 'all of his friends do, and it's Microsoft, innit? ' - no, user stupidity is no excuse - it is a part of TCO too), versus, um, a few apt-gets and I believe one reboot, you're in with a good chance of owing me money.

    4. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by filmcritic · · Score: 1

      Wait until Mom and Dad have to simply "open VI and edit lines out" to make something simple work. They'll think twice about loonix at home for sure.

    5. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by foobar104 · · Score: 2

      Nope. It's not a 1-to-1 replacement for Outlook. It won't work with Exchange 5.5, it doesn't support forms, public folders, journals, or a heap of other things. If your enterprise depends on Exchange-- and most do-- you're SOL even with Evolution.

    6. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by foobar104 · · Score: 2

      Man, you are such an asshole. Nevertheless, I will respond. Except to the stuff that just annoyed me, which I will simply ignore.

      Yes, Outlook is an absolutely necessary tool for many-- possibly even most-- companies. I make no statement about whether this is good or bad, but it's true anyway. If your company has an Exchange/Outlook system in place, and you try to deploy Linux on the desktop, you will end up wasting a fortune and then going back to Windows anyway.

      Look at it this way: you have a system that works. Not just well, it works really well. That system depends on Exchange and Outlook. You then try to bring in something like Linux, where the best you can do is Evolution with their connector product. Which isn't very well at all, because the connector uses WebDAV instead of MAPI, meaning you have to do a significant amount of work to your server to even support the connector, and it doesn't support key features like journals or forms. So you end up with a system that sort-of works, except for the things that don't. Not to mention the fact that you have to spend another fortune training up your support staff to deal with two different operating systems and two entirely different sets of troubleshooting procedures. It's a waste of time and money.

      It's cheaper to just maintain the status quo.

      I assert to you that it will not be possible for anybody to build a desktop system that fits into the modern enterprise as well as a Windows system can. The Exchange-based enterprise is not perfect. It could be improved in lots of ways. The only way to get on the desktop of the typical enterprise is to come up with something significantly better than the combination of Windows desktops, Windows servers, Outlook, and Exchange. It hasn't happened so far. Maybe it will some day, but if that newer, better system comes from the "free" software world, I'll eat my shoe.

      Oh, and to address your comment about viruses, in the past three years my company has not been affected by a single virus. Why? Because we run virus scanners where they're appropriate. No problem there. So associating Windows with viruses like they're intrinsically linked is just FUD in the most literal sense: you're trying to spread fear by relying on the uncertainty of your audience to plant the seeds of doubt.

      Now if you'd said 'a decent GUI based file manager', that might have been different.

      What file manager? Use Outlook's public folders. All the important data gets stored on secure servers, indexed for easy retrieval, and backed up every hour on the hour. File managers are obsolete, my friend. Most people just don't know it yet.

    7. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by foobar104 · · Score: 2

      You should post more. I like the cut of your jib. These freaks who honestly believe that Linux is a decent, professional operating system need a wake-up call, and you and I are about the only people around here willing to give it to them.

    8. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by jonadab · · Score: 2

      > Or are you just talking about the cost of purchase, not the TCO?
      > In the enterprise, Linux is more expensive to run on the desktop
      > than Windows is, because the most basic tools for Windows
      > (Outlook, for one) don't exist in a usable form on Linux.

      Outlook has very high TCO, higher than Windows and Linux combined
      and any other office software you want to name into the bargain.
      It roughly triples the number of times you have to reinstall Windows.
      No sane admin would ever willingly permit Outlook in a multiseat
      setting where TCO mattered.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    9. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by foobar104 · · Score: 2

      So Outlook roughly triples the number of times you have to install Windows, huh? Well, considering the number of times I've had to reinstall Windows is zero, I guess you're right. Three times zero is zero.

      And as for your comment about "no sane admin," the majority is always sane, my small-minded friend. More of the Global 2000 use Microsoft Exchange and Outlook than don't. Obviously they are not all insane, as you would have us believe.

    10. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "No sane admin would ever willingly permit Outlook in a multiseat
      setting where TCO mattered."


      If by "sane" you mean the kind of admin that RE-installs Windows THREE times because of some Outlook mystery behavior, then...yeah...that kind of "sane" person probably shouldn't let Outlook in the door. Of course, that kind of person obviously doesn't have a clue...

      Call me INsane - it's been done before - but I have Outlook 98 and 2000 and Exchange 5.5 and 2000 and Windows 98, NT and 2000 over a total of 70 workstations, 7 servers and 110 users and I have NEVER, repeat NEVER had to "reinstall" OS because of Outlook's behavior. In fact, I haven't had to reinstall OS on a workstation or server (not including upgrades) but about 5 times over the past 3 years. ANY "OS reinstallation" means you don't have the troubleshooting skills to figure out the problem at hand, so you bailed and started over. If you can't edit the registry, de-install and re-install drivers, or troubleshoot and know the difference between *software* and *OS* issues, then you're right...you shouldn't have Outlook and Exchange on the floor.

      Well, in that case, you shouldn't have ANY OS and software on the floor.

      And you should stay well away from the pencil sharpener...

    11. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by kaiidth · · Score: 1

      Man, you are such an asshole.

      And you, sweetheart :-)

      To rephrase; you're right that Outlook is a perfectly useful solution for, as you put it, 'the modern enterprise'. However, I suspect that it is not the only solution for 'the modern enterprise' - and that, furthermore, 'the modern enterprise' is an extremely broad category in which to work. You probably mean 'the place where foobar104 works'.

      I find that there are many enterprises out there - modern or otherwise - that for various reasons including the ones you so adeptly identified, have concluded that making use of Windows, Outlook, and Unix is not altogether an effective solution. Rather than throwing, as it were, the baby out with the bathwater, they have instead chosen to avoid Outlook, or buy themselves a fix. And they have managed it too - I have thus far worked with only one company that made use of Outlook, and I have worked in a number of multinational corporations. I agree that it is a shame that Outlook is so spectacularly incapable of use in a 'hybrid' environment, since, as Slashdot has previously covered, there are few software options that approach its functionality - but not, oddly, none. Notes is still frequently used, though I personally am not a fan of either Outlook or Notes; both are a little buzzword- ridden and neither provide more than a fraction of the real potential that groupware has. Mostly they don't seem to be used for anything but filesharing, calendar, and email - so much for collaborative work.

      Of course, if the status quo is Outlook, hostile to Unix, and it works with the organisation, there is no reason to change - but often, the status quo does not include Outlook.

      Really, it's this that annoyed me so much with your original comment - the assumption that because Outlook was 'a solution', it must be 'the solution' - the one and only possible answer to a well-specified question. It's just a glorified mail server + database + calendar + contacts + so on... there are other ways of managing this information, and frankly, Outlook is no closer to the 'one and only solution' for groupware than Microsoft Research is, and it must be said that research in the field of collaborative work is generally pretty much stumbling in the dark right now. Marketing would have you believe it to be a magic bullet, but it's just an answer to some of the possible problems that some companies might face - to paraphrase Douglas Adams, Microsoft "know the answer, but they don't really know what the question is", in any particular case.

      I agree, in your case, it works 'really well', at least, by your definition of 'really well' and for your definition of 'modern enterprise' - case studies would be really easy if all cases were identical, don't you think? One can put together an all-Microsoft solution and train one's company to work in such a way that their methods approach those that the software engineers were expecting when they designed their groupware. However, one might be losing out - maybe the methods the company already had were better?

      It happens. I am reminded of a pilot groupware solution implemented for social workers in the UK - long on groupware/computer-supported collaborative work, and short on understanding of the original paper-based system. It replaced a two-computer-per-office system that was used to summarise information and a lot of paper; in practice, the paper was still used (try making notes on a laptop in rainy weather after six hours' travel) and the groupware was only touched when the manager was around - even though that groupware was being successfully implemented in other environments. Equally, people felt 'wrong' about it - choosing descriptions of human frailties from pull-down menus, having to learn how to inform the system when a client died - it was the wrong solution for their working environment. Read 'Plans and Situated Actions' - Suchman, 1987. "Ethnography allows us... to account for the situated and organisational aspects of work. These social, contextual and artefactual contexts of work, and the interactions between them, accounts for much of people's behaviour in the real world" - in other words, it's very difficult to explain how people work without being there. It depends very much on environment.

      The Microsoft engineers are not in my office; they might be correct by default, or their software might be so flexible that it can be used for any situation; the second is demonstrably false given the lack of clients for so-called 'alternative OS's', and the first is only true for a small proportion of the number of enterprises out there, apparently including yours. Heck, a music studio where I worked still uses a system based around the Atari ST... and they seem pretty happy with it. It fulfils their requirements; their organisation is richer with it than without, and that is, after all, the point of a groupware solution.

      As for decent GUI file manager, it has been my experience that whilst the fact of the matter is that information is stored centrally, many people are more comfortable doing rough work in an environment that is perceived to be separate from the group/shared/public environment. I concede that the Outlook package may support said illusion, though putting your private drafts in 'public folders' is a little counter-intuitive. Furthermore, I note that the actual mechanics behind a UNIX form of 'public folders' is a very short shell script... really, all I'd like to see is a nice clear graphical analogue of /home/user [conceptually private] and /mnt/share/user/, and nothing irrelevant, but haven't seen anything graphical for UNIX for file management that I would describe as particularly usable... It's a small complaint, of course.

      And yes, I have not found Outlook to be effective, particularly due to viruses (but I'm not afraid of it - nor uncertain - nor do I doubt that it will irritate me again!). Though I am not working as a sysadmin, being in R&D, I have spent vastly too much of my time helping out colleagues, idiots from other companies, and family members, with various Windows - particularly Outlook - related issues. Of course, most of these cases were due to either human idiocy or dumb MCSEs, and if we all hired you, o wonderful one, instead of the tame MCSE (and if so much on NT/XP didn't require admin rights...), I'm sure we'd all become immune. I'd recommend you, except for your colourful language :-)

    12. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2


      Wait until Mom and Dad have to simply "open VI and edit lines out" to make something simple work.


      Yes and no. Its a valid point, but not as clever a point as some Linux critics might think.

      First, assuming you must use a text editor, there are more user-friendly editors out there. Many that are included as a standard install in many default distros. Simple default GUI editors will also work fine.

      Secondly, there are some decent GUI configuration managers included on various distros. They'll handle the simple configs most home users will need to deal with - and handle it well. Mom and Dad may never have to know their configurations are stored as simple text files.

      Finally, if Mom and Dad have ran in to a serious issue, they are beyond the point of phone tech support no matter what OS they're using. Sure. They'll try. But ultimately they're in for a good deal of frustration. Its much less painful for the end user, and less milage on their local friendly helpdesk, if they simply hire in an expert to handle the problem.

      How often Mom and Dad end up in the third situation may or may not be an issue with their OS of choice.
    13. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2


      It won't work with Exchange 5.5, it doesn't support forms, public folders, journals, or a heap of other things.


      I always thought that the "killer app" for Exchange / Outlook was scheduling. That bit was done right.

      Everything else looks like nice little addons - but who actually uses them? I've used public folders (and I know orgs in my center use them). But it seems to be something that was used "because it was there" more than it being a killer feature. I don't know anybody who uses journals or forms. In other words, all these other features seem far from compelling. And, in fact, may be easily replaced by other technologies.

      If it weren't for scheduling.
    14. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by foobar104 · · Score: 2

      Your comment was too long and boring. Didn't read it. Don't care.

    15. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by foobar104 · · Score: 2

      You're both right and wrong, I think. Scheduling is a big part of what makes Exchange cool, but public folders, forms, and journals are pretty damn useful as well. Public folders make NAS systems obsolete. Forms are like little mini-applications that can be used for anything from sending out birthday party announcements to expense reports. Journals are a little known, seldom used, incredibly powerful feature. Not only can I tell you, for example, that I worked on this document, but I can tell you exactly when I worked on it, because it's all recorded in my journal

    16. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2

      Hmmm. I'll have to play with these features a bit more out of curiosity.

      I find public folders more of a half-hearted stab at groupware. I think I see what you're saying about it replacing a NAS system. But I find it hard to completely swallow. ;) I'll chat up my local Exchange admins a bit more on the subject.

      Still. Public folders are easily replaced. Arguably with better technology.

      Forms still sounds like fluff. And although the journal might be a kind of cool feature to play around with, it still sounds like a feature that just isn't usefull to most people. Its something else I'll have to poke around my environment and see if I can't find users of these features.

    17. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by krmt · · Score: 2
      the most basic tools for Windows (Outlook, for one) don't exist in a usable form on Linux.
      Patience my lad. Remember the days when you could put things like "A plausible office suite" and "a fully functional web browser" in those parentheses?

      Or even further back, "A GUI install", "a desktop environment", "a decent GUI mail client", "Hardware OpenGL acceleration", and hell, why not bring it up, "a TCP/IP stack".

      Just be patient. If the present trends continue, the functionality you need will appear in time.
      --

      "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

    18. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by foobar104 · · Score: 2

      Patience my lad. Remember the days when you could put things like "A plausible office suite" and "a fully functional web browser" in those parentheses?

      You mean, like, today?

      Face it, man. Linux desktop software is of uniformly bad design and low quality. Even in those cases where you could replace a better desktop system-- a Mac or a PC-- with Windows, you'd be a fool to bother.

    19. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by krmt · · Score: 2

      But you'd be a fool not to notice that the linux desktop situation has improved dramatically over the past few years. Just because it's not ready today for you doesn't mean it won't be tomorrow.

      --

      "I may not have morals, but I have standards."

    20. Re:Sun Micro lays out recovery plan by foobar104 · · Score: 2

      So you're trying to say that Linux may be a useful desktop operating system someday? Can't hardly argue with that. Can't hardly bring myself to care, either. In three years Linux may reach the point where it's comparable to the Windows or Mac OS operating systems of today... by which time those operating systems will be three years further along.

  22. Low cost... by Sp4c3+C4d3t · · Score: 1

    How low is low? Will these cost $500 or $100?

    I can see myself buying one maybe as a secondary PC, or perhaps a Christmas gift to my parents, if the price is right.

    --
    Happy New Year, it's 1984!
    1. Re:Low cost... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think you're in Sun's target market.

  23. SUN's motivation by glh · · Score: 2

    Quote from article:

    "The primary motivator for enterprise customers (to buy Sun Linux desktops) will be reduction in costs and freedom from Microsoft," Sun said in a statement on the user conference.

    The way this is worded just has an elitest anti-MS sentiment about it. "Freedom from Microsoft". Why should the primary motivator be to give users freedom from MS? One thing that has always bothered me about SUN is that they just can't get away from slamming MS all the time. Sure, it might be appealing to a lot of anti-MS people, but most Joe Blow consumers aren't going to buy a PC just because they want to be "free from Microsoft".

    If they would have approached this new product with something like "offering consumers more choices and better prices" I would be much more excited about it. At first I thought that is honestly what they were trying to do, but then I read the statement mentioned above. Now I read it as "we don't care about the consumer, we just want to take marketshare away from MS's customers". Just a perception thing, but I think it has merit. I'm sure I won't be the only one to pick up on this.

    1. Re:SUN's motivation by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 3, Insightful
      "Freedom from Microsoft". Why should the primary motivator be to give users freedom from MS?

      I think it would be better translated as freedom from Microsoft Licensing.

      I know the company I work for has balked about the new scheme, and we are upgrading our existing machines (maintaing the old licenses) instead of buying new hardware.

      The new MS Licensing finally got it through to the people controlling the company finances that we are entirely too dependent on proprietary software. We are looking into Linux to replace our basic Office computers at this point. We still need MS for CAD, though... :-(

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
    2. Re:SUN's motivation by mustangdavis · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      "The primary motivator for enterprise customers (to buy Sun Linux desktops) will be reduction in costs and freedom from Microsoft," Sun said in a statement on the user conference.

      Since when are large companies really concerned with "freedom from Microsoft"?? Sun is concerned about their bottom line, plain and simple.

      In fact, it sounds like Sun has a way to cut costs by slowly eliminating Solaris and replacing it with Linux ... which means, as usual, eliminating the jobs of innocent programmers and tech support. Also, they will be able to reduce costs by repackaging cheap hardware as Sun hardware and sell it for rediculous prices to Universities that have professors that "must have a Sun to do their research on".

      Actually, they do want to be free from Microsoft, but not for the B.S. reasons they provided. This is just like big business ... sugar coat the dismissal of employees by hiding it in positively spun plan of action which will cut costs. (Isn't it great, we're going to use Linux now! We'll creat hundreds of jobs *coughing* and fire a few thousand while we're at it *stop coughing*) They never mention how it will rip out the hearts and souls of the employees that made the company a success! However, Sun is a sinking ship, so those people should have had their resume's out on the open market for over a year! If they didn't, maybe they deserve to go down with the ship for their lack of forsight ...

      In anycase, I can't even fathom how the big wigs at Sun came up with this ludicrous idea of selling cheap PCs ... all they are going to do is enter a saturated market that is already under complete control by Michael Dell and alienate their loyal customer base made up of people desiring high end Unix servers ...

      This should be one of the final nails in Sun's coffin. The shareholders of Sun should sue the executive managers of that company for mismanagement!

    3. Re:SUN's motivation by Rutulian · · Score: 1
      Now I read it as "we don't care about the consumer, we just want to take marketshare away from MS's customers".

      Err... Since when have companies ever cared about their customers. Corporations care about stock prices and shareholders; customers are merely a means to an end.

      Also, more people see the ability to buy non-Microsoft products as "Freedom from Microsoft" than you think. Sure, home pc buyers probably don't, but corporate IT departments with their eyes on the books certainly do, as do schools and government agencies. For the most part they hate buying from Microsoft and they wouldn't if they had an alternative.

    4. Re:SUN's motivation by elmegil · · Score: 2
      which means, as usual, eliminating the jobs of innocent programmers and tech support.

      <sarcasm>Because after all, when a significant segment of your income is your support services organization, you definitely want to get rid of them.</sarcasm>

      Or do you really think the patchwork quilt of Linux is easier to support than the relatively unified OS that is Solaris? I've been supporting Solaris for Sun for 7 years, and playing with Linux at home almost as long, and I have to say that Solaris' integration is much more cohesive in my opinion. And that makes it easier to support.

      --
      7 November 2006: The day Americans realized corruption and incompetence weren't addressing 11 September 2001
    5. Re:SUN's motivation by pmz · · Score: 2

      We still need MS for CAD, though... :-(

      I guess that depends on what CAD software you use. Pro/E's entry-level packages are only several thousand dollars per seat (expensive if you are using a $49.95 CAD package, but not so bad otherwise), and PTC announced that they will support Pro/E on Linux, soon. If you need more beef, you could always get a Blade 2000 with Solaris. Both of these options are totally MS-free.

    6. Re:SUN's motivation by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 2
      I know there are alternatives out there, but it's back to the accountants recognizing it. AutoCad by AutoDesk is a software package they have heard of, so that's what we need to have, in their minds.

      I'll be happy if they take it one step at a time, and they are starting with the OS/Office suite. Maybe someday we can finish the migration. :-)

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
    7. Re:SUN's motivation by dohcvtec · · Score: 1

      Autodesk, sort of the Microsoft of the CAD world, only ships products for Microsoft OSs. That's the only thing that keeps a Windows box under my desk. I am an avid home *nix user and I really wish I could use a better OS at work. Back to the topic at hand, if I were able to use a Linux machine at work, Sun's Linux offering would help the cause.

      --
      -- Never hit a man with glasses. Hit him with a baseball bat.
  24. Uhm, its a little different? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since when is giving away software a bad thing? If I remember correctly, MS was just trying to undercut the opposition, which is a totally legal business move.

    MS got in to trouble because they took other steps, some of which, with the intent of hindering the otherguys software from competing. I believe thats why they got in to trouble, not cause their software was free :)

  25. StarOffice Monopoly by SanLouBlues · · Score: 5, Funny

    And when Sun has their Office Suite monopoly, they'll use their propriety (fully documented) xml file format to force people to use either Windows, Linux, or Solaris forever. HAHAHAHAHA!!!! It's just too dastardly!

    1. Re:StarOffice Monopoly by chegosaurus · · Score: 1

      Sounds like one more reason why BSD is dying... ;-)

  26. Repeat after me... by Royster · · Score: 2

    Microsoft is a convicted monopolist.

    Market behavior with is legal and ethical by a company in a competitive market is neither legal nor ethical for a monopolist.

    --
    I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
    1. Re:Repeat after me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You guys' one shining day in the sun was the day Microsoft was declared a monopoly.

      It's been pretty shitty since, hasn't it? Still, you can think back, and remember how good you felt that day....

  27. Other Columns by Scott McCollum by Tim+Colgate · · Score: 5, Informative
    Scott McCollum, who wrote the editorial in WorldTechTribune - you may remember him from other choice articles:

    New Linux virus creates peer-to-peer terror network
    HP finally fires their anti-business business strategist for Linux
    Disbanding the RIAA will turn the music scene into 17th Century Europe
    The GPL, open source freedoms and the Cold War

    This last article has this classic quote:

    The small minority of geeks who adhere to the cultish mindset of the GPL and Linux will definitely take offense to this, but there is no reasoning with someone who blindly follows the precepts of open source and the GPL ...those people will never understand why the NSA would reject the GPL. For rational people, I can sum up exactly why the GPL is not and in its current form will never be useful for the NSA or any similar enterprise: "Open" is the exact opposite of "secure."

    1. Re:Other Columns by Scott McCollum by linuxislandsucks · · Score: 1

      and the quote is dead wrong on its face..

      A secure computer system means that all computer professionals know its every weakness and the configuratiosn that get rid of that weakness..

      Whereas secure gov orgs depend on keeping everyone in the dark and bleivieing Bush..

      Since not everyone is in the dark at the NSa..it thus is not secure in the first place :)

      --
      Don't Tread on OpenSource
    2. Re:Other Columns by Scott McCollum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What, you have a better way to get free tech support for Office XP?

    3. Re:Other Columns by Scott McCollum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahhh!! Opposing viewpoints! Turn it off! Turn it off!

    4. Re:Other Columns by Scott McCollum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just took a look at the worldtechtribune site. It's like a web version of the Weekly World News. Check it out. It's really good for a few laughs.

    5. Re:Other Columns by Scott McCollum by oakwood · · Score: 1

      And to add further credibility, the HP article is sponsored by "Beautiful, Single, and Online"

  28. WRONG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Giving away IE for free is not the monopoly, bozos. It is because Microsoft put it with the OS that it led to the monopoly.

  29. UNIX companies don't understand PC hardware.. by XaXXon · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While I wish SUN all the best luck in selling these low-cost Linux PCs, I don't have great faith in their ability to succeed in this low-margin market. These companies don't have a true understanding for how little money is involved with selling PC hardware.

    I worked for SGI a few years ago (as an intern), just as they were introducing their PC strategy. They were coming out with (relatively) low-cost NT workstations with a proprietary graphics system (kicked ass at the time..), but were immediately stuck in a catch-22. They had high prices because they couldn't sell enough, and couldn't sell enough because of their high prices. SGI also tried selling server-ish PC boxes (with redundant power supplies, and multiple processors and stuff), but that lasted about a year as well, before it went away (at least I can't find it on their web page anymore)

    When people buy PC hardware, they expect to pay PC hardware prices. And they want support. And warranties.. There's just no money there...especially not the kind of money these companies are used to seeing.

    If they're getting in to this to make money, then they're in trouble. If SUN is getting in to this to fight against MS, then great, but I don't think SUN has enough money to fight MS.

    1. Re:UNIX companies don't understand PC hardware.. by Salsaman · · Score: 3, Informative
      When people buy PC hardware, they expect to pay PC hardware prices.

      So what's your point ? These boxes ought to be cheaper than Wondows PC's because the OS and Office suite on them is free.

      And they want support. And warranties.

      Are you claiming that Sun can't offer support and warranties ?

    2. Re:UNIX companies don't understand PC hardware.. by XaXXon · · Score: 2

      So what's your point ? These boxes ought to be cheaper than Wondows PC's because the OS and Office suite on them is free.

      What I'm saying is that you have to move HUGE quantities of computers to make money while charging prices that are consistent with other PC vendors. The margins there just so small that it's incredibly hard to break into the market.

      Are you claiming that Sun can't offer support and warranties ?

      I'm claiming that the support for PC hardware is normally vastly different than the support for big iron. People want 3 year warranties thrown in with their computer purchase. SUN is used to charging thousands of dollars a year for support. Also, big iron support tends to be on-site with 24 hour (or better) parts availability. This costs bundles and doesn't translate well to PC support.

      Anyways, all I was really trying to say is that SUN is trying to get into a very tight market that is just coming back into line from a super-saturated point it was at around 1999-2000. SUN has no experience in this market and it will be very difficult for them to succeed.

    3. Re:UNIX companies don't understand PC hardware.. by jasonditz · · Score: 1

      Sun has 6 billion dollars in cash and no debt.

      Its not going to be easy and success isn't guarenteed, but Sun is a major player and if they are really serious about this, they will certainly make an interesting run of it.

      No offense to SGI (because I've used their products and have nothing but respect for them) but Sun is in a whole nother league.

  30. Why Sun? because competition is a wonderful thing. by xeniten · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Stay relevant in the market place or fade away....Keep up with the current market trends or die, it's that simple.

    This move may or may not do anything for Sun's fortunes, but it's sure to keep IBM/Redhat awake at nights.This is a race to see which company is the "offical" supplier of linux desktop/workstation pc's, and that means more choice for you, and more opportunities for Linux growth.

    --
    Romana: "How did you know?" Doctor Who: "Ah, well, knowing is easy. Everyone does THAT ad nauseum. I just sort of hope"
  31. Coal to newcastle? .... by taniwha · · Score: 2
    In a bout of microsoft driven pseudo-angts they say: "The specifics of the deal Sun Microsystems has made are shocking: Sun will "donate" copies of their StarOffice 6.0 productivity suite to the Ministries of Education on just about every continent except for Antarctica. "

    of course selling penguins to Antartica is lost cause and even Sun wouldn't try that ....

    1. Re:Coal to newcastle? .... by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 2
      That depends...

      Are the penguins sexy?

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
  32. Sun and desktops ? by _Marvin_ · · Score: 1

    However much I love seeing competition for Microsoft and however much I respect Sun for their server-side products, I have to say: Sun is absolutely clueless when it comes to desktop software and useability. Let's hope they're still able to learn...

    --
    "We won't use guns, we won't use bombs, we'll use the one thing we've got more of and that's our minds" - Pulp
  33. Not necessarily a fair comparison by jvmatthe · · Score: 2

    The comparison between what Sun is doing and the monopolistic behaviour of Microsoft is unfair.

    Microsoft using its desktop dominance to put IE in front of users before they have a chance to get Netscape is using dominance in one market to gain dominance in another. That's when a company uses a monopoly in a criminal manner.

    Sun, on the other hand, is trying to gain share in a market where they have no leverage other than their product and the price they're willing to sell it at. They aren't leveraging their hardware products (AFAICT) to get people to use Star Office. They aren't using Solaris to push Star Office onto these companies. They are doing what any non-monopoly company would do when entering a new market: offering their products at a very low price (here, free) to encourage users to switch. The pay-off comes far, far down the line when Star Office (potentially) becomes a real player in the field of office software.

    In short: Microsoft leverages OS dominance to gain browser dominance. Sun uses low price to gain a foothold in office productivity market. Not the same thing.

  34. New York Times Report: Different Focus by Pinky3 · · Score: 3, Informative

    The New York Times article,
    The New Sun Ready to Push Linux as Alternative to Microsoft, emphasizes the push for Linux and StarOffice, without any mention of hardware. All of these articles are guessing what Sun is going to say tomorrow, when the offical announcement is to be made.

  35. sometimes the English language sucks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    you really start to get an idea that sun wants to beat MS like a red headed step child
    You know, I actually knew a red headed step child. And he didn't use a Microsoft operating system. So there.
    1. Re:sometimes the English language sucks by King+Mongo · · Score: 1

      I _am_ a red-headed stepchild. Insensitive clods.

  36. It's all about the bottom line by bigmouth_strikes · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sun has a history of pulling stunts like this against Microsoft. Their reasoning is that every dollar that doesn't end up in Microsoft's pocket, is a dollar they can't spend in developing software competing with Sun's own. It's as simple as that.

    Star Office was an attempt to undermine the very profitable Office suite. By pushing Linux machines, they do the same thing with the OS. They don't gain anything on this themselves - it's not their technology, it's just that they want to take away free money from MS.

    --
    Oh, I can't help quoting you because everything that you said rings true
  37. Child abuse by ENOENT · · Score: 0, Troll

    sun wants to beat MS like a red headed step child

    I find this expression really disturbing. When did child abuse become funny or clever? Have you ever seen an abusive parent or step-parent? It's not funny. It's not clever. It's just horrible.

    Now mod me down for being OT. I really don't care.

    --
    That's "Mr. Soulless Automaton" to you, Bub.
    1. Re:Child abuse by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      What, you actually *liked* that Sam kid on Different Strokes?

    2. Re:Child abuse by filmcritic · · Score: 1

      Who gave the parent post "insightful"?? What an ass clown....waaaa waaaa...it disturbs me...waaa waaa child abuse....

    3. Re:Child abuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "beat like a red headed step child"

      didn't this phrase go out of style with "niggardly" and "indian giver"? aside from the child abuse thing, does this mean that the only child less wanted than a stepchild is a redheaded one?

      if the poster had said, "sun wants to beat MS like a nigger", would this have been posted?

    4. Re:Child abuse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know anybody who can't watch the verbal abuse the hea...I mean son takes in So, I Married an Axe Murderer and not chuckle to themselves. It's horrifically funny...and it makes you think.

      Ultimately we end up screwing over our children no matter how nice we are or aren't...so what can we do...laugh a little now and then.

  38. Sun? Low cost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Low cost machines from Sun?

    At Sun $15.000 would qualify for that...

    1. Re:Sun? Low cost by magellan · · Score: 3, Informative

      "At Sun $15.000 would qualify for that..."

      Where have you been?

      SPARC/Solaris Servers from Sun start at $995.

      SPARC/Solaris Workstations from Sun start at $995.

  39. sun need to careful or they may be as evil as ms by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He who fights with monsters might take care lest he thereby become a monster. And if you gaze for long into an abyss, the abyss gazes also into you.

    Friedrich Nietzsche

  40. It's not illegal until you're a monopoly by pjrc · · Score: 1, Redundant
    From Scott McCollum of the World Tech Tribune:

    After years of protestation and lawsuits against Microsoft giving away IE for free, is Sun hypocritically hoping to create an illegal monopoly of their own by giving StarOffice 6 to students for free?

    Obviously Scott hasn't paid much attention to the FACT (as estabished in court and held up on appeal) that Microsoft has monopoly, but Sun does not.

    Sun's bundling their entry to the productivity software market with low-end PCs would be illegal, and hypocracy, if Sun has a monopoly in low-end PC hardware.

    Last time I checked, Sun did not have a monopoly in low-end PC hardware. In fact, nobody has any market share in PC hardware that even remotely resembles a monopoly.

    Scott ovbious likes Microsoft a lot (or rehashed some press material to meet a deadline...) For example:

    Consumers want quality products like Microsoft Office XP, but they'd buy Sun's StarOffice 6 in a heartbeat if it did all the same stuff for $400 less.

    The article goes on trashing Sun... they're losing money, they might not be serious out the productivity software because they sell hardware (yes, fear, uncertainty and doubt... pure speculation), Sun's throwing away 5.7 billion by giving it away for free.... how many people outside software, music labels and movie studios really believe that all those people who accepted it for free would have paid full retail ??

  41. It would need to have a really cool case.... by ThinkSpeak · · Score: 1

    Sure the hardware would be the same as what you can get from Dell, Gateway, etc.

    But if they have a really cool case design (like Apple) with the Sun logo on front I think it would have a chance to sell to status-minded geeks at a premium.

    Some of you are probably laughing at this but there is no doubt that image sells.

    1. Re:It would need to have a really cool case.... by oob · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think that there's more to it than that; Sun thinks (and I agree) that it is natural migration for someone that uses Linux as a desktop to purchase Sun kit when they have a computing task that requires an industrial strength solution.

      Add to that that I expect that Sun will be looking to "blur the lines" somewhat between Sun-Linux and Solaris - I wouldn't be at all surprised to see migration tools and cross-over applications as part of the Sun distribution - don't forget that Solaris has had "lxrun" for as long as I can remember.

  42. Sun's likely strategy... by tjwhaynes · · Score: 2

    From where I'm sitting, Sun can't be about to push a load of cheap linux boxes out for the average user. That would be commercial suicide - the PC market is already too cut-throat for there to be any margins to work with.

    Sun probably isn't that worried about getting a vast income from pushing StarOffice for schools either - the benefit to Sun from this initiative is that students will be familiar with StarOffice rather than MS Office.

    Sun's likely push here is to move in and replace all those Windows boxes in places like call centres, POS terminals and sales rooms where a centralized server provides much of the grunt and the terminals actually don't do much. Being able to replace existing Windows installs with PC + Linux makes a lot of cost sense - network installs, locked down to prevent fiddling, with the needed apps either on the Linux machines or on a central (Solaris?) server is likely to be a winner on TCO.

    Cheers,

    Toby Haynes

    --
    Anything I post is strictly my own thoughts and doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the opinions of IBM.
  43. A word from the Red-Headed League by melquiades · · Score: 5, Funny
    ...you really start to get an idea that sun wants to beat MS like a red headed step child...
    I beg your pardon!! As a redhead, I strongly object to this insensitive, derogatory, almost bigoted verbal abuse of people with red hair, who frequently bear the brunt of tasteless remarks such as this one. I will not tolerate being compared to Microsoft!
    1. Re:A word from the Red-Headed League by CaffeineAddict2001 · · Score: 2

      Look at yer heed! Eets like an orange on a toothpick!

    2. Re:A word from the Red-Headed League by John+Harrison · · Score: 2

      Are you also a step-child? If not then you weren't in the group being slighted.

    3. Re:A word from the Red-Headed League by kevin+lyda · · Score: 2

      good point. i second that.

      --
      US Citizen living abroad? Register to vote!
    4. Re:A word from the Red-Headed League by detritus. · · Score: 1

      Ditto. (Another redhead).

    5. Re:A word from the Red-Headed League by woodsma · · Score: 1

      Hear hear! I was a red-headed step child (now I'm a red-headed step ADULT) and I resent you use of that expression. Anybody care to start a boycott with me? :)

    6. Re:A word from the Red-Headed League by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      as another red-headed step adult (but only by a fortnight), ditto.

    7. Re:A word from the Red-Headed League by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shut up you ginger twat

    8. Re:A word from the Red-Headed League by woodsma · · Score: 1

      Screw off, jerk. The smilie indicates that it was a JOKE you moron.

  44. Newsflash: Sun Wants to Destroy Microsoft by guttentag · · Score: 2
    you really start to get an idea that sun wants to beat MS like a red headed step child
    Where have you been for the last decade or so? This is not news. Scott McNealy has been publicly drawing comparisons between Gates and Vader/Satan/other-evil-figures for years. McNealy's purpose in life is to destroy Microsoft.
    1. Re:Newsflash: Sun Wants to Destroy Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You say that as if you think that it's a bad thing.

  45. istroll(parent) by catfood · · Score: 2

    Yeah, except for the two facts you ignored in the post (all of it!) to which you were ostensibly responding.

    Troll.

    1. Re:istroll(parent) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those facts aren't relevant to the argument. Sun is accused of using some of the same tactics that Microsoft has been criticized for in the past. It doesn't make it better because a) they have not been ruled a monopoly or b) they choose to use Linux. The motivation is the same - sell stuff cheap to increase market share in order to lock competitors out and consumers in.

    2. Re:istroll(parent) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...sell stuff cheap to increase market share in order to lock competitors out and consumers in.

      In other words, a capitalist business. This is the goal of every business in America.

      So when is the next mensa meeting?

    3. Re:istroll(parent) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It makes you really angry when people don't gasp in awe at the M-word, doesn't it?

  46. Giving away StarOffice != giving away Windows by Eloquence · · Score: 5, Informative
    First, you should know that the author of the editorial is the same troll that wrote brilliant articles like "The jihad against Microsoft":

    Torvalds posted his Unix rip-off dubbed "Linux" on the Internet in 1991 for free. True to his family's socialist radical politics, Torvalds released his OS under the non-standard General Public License (GPL) or "copyleft." Under the GPL, programmers had the ability to download Torvalds' Linux, fix the bugs in his program and give the improved program back to him to distribute to the Linux community. GPL programs are essentially community property with no real owners, but since Torvalds was the originator of the rip-off, it becomes his personal rip-off to control as he wishes. In other words, Torvalds became the dictatorial leader of the Linux cult with all decisions for the greater community good going through him first, then doled out at his convenience.

    Let's all move Scott McCollum into our collective killfiles and move on, shall we? Furthermore, the key difference between Sun's donation and Microsoft's, besides the fact that Sun is not a monopoly, is that Sun has open sourced Star Office. To gloss over this little fact is typical for a professional troll like McCollum. While Star Office itself is not open, it's an open platform, and the differences between SO and OO are minor. So even if SO/OO were to become the standard, it would always be easy to move somewhere else if necessary (and you can bet someone will fork OO if Sun does something fishy).

    1. Re:Giving away StarOffice != giving away Windows by Nickbot · · Score: 1
      Spot on.

      Below you can enjoy an email a friend of mine recieved from WTT in response to an email he sent mischievously asking if they had been hacked, after they printed an article that was slightly-less-than-mouthfoaming about Open Source:

      From: bob adkins
      To: XXX@XXX.XXX

      Unlike the web sites who claim to support "free" speech (and free software) we practice it. If you have an article that is worthy of publication, we have no problems in printing it. Your slant on the subject does not determine if we accept for publication. Mr. Read's article is an exception. We do not want "review" type articles of any type. It just is not what the website is about. Perhaps that will change in the future. SQUEAK was Mr. Read's first attempt and the article was well written, so we printed it.

      Worldtechtribune does not have a position against open source. We DO have a position against GNU "freedom" copyleft system. It is communist. It was copied directly from Soviet law. It's American "author" admits that he is a Communist, and we believe that kind of "freedom" is not free at all.

      US Copyright law allows any author to give his product away for no charge. But, it protects him from anyone else using it without his permission. GNU does not. GNU is simply not necessary. It is exist only to provide a way for a group of programmers, who admit they are communists, to spread their beliefs under thecamouflage of "freedom". It has nothing to do with software at all.

      I do Smalltalk, too. Nearly everything I have written has been given away for free. Some was not. It was my choice and US law protected that choice. US copyright law also allows for "open source". I have been a Linux lover since 1994, but I have also been a Linux hater since 1994. It is not perfect, and in some respects, not even very good. When it is "good enough" the market will make it the primary choice of users.

      Thanks for reading WTT. We practice freedom here.
      As you can see they support free speech, however speech that is contrary to the party line is not free, and therefore not allowed. Thus Spake the Ministry of Truth.

      Excuse me while I affix my tinfoil hat that allows me to see the filthy Commie plots to taint our Vital Bodily Fluids...

      --
      Praise the Force Field! Praise the Laser Project! Slackware Loon #19830573
    2. Re:Giving away StarOffice != giving away Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      besides the fact that Sun is not a monopoly

      Who else can you buy Solaris from? Can I buy it from Microsoft? Apple? IBM? Corel?

    3. Re:Giving away StarOffice != giving away Windows by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Yes, and I can only buy Mac OS X from Apple, and AIX from IBM .. hmm, seems like there's an awful lot of monopolies out there ..

      Moron.

    4. Re:Giving away StarOffice != giving away Windows by Dave_bsr · · Score: 1

      Now That's funny. : D

      look, mom, i'm a communist. Linus is a communist. Robin Hood was a communist too ya know.

      www.TinHatsForCheap.com

      --


      Who is this Anonymous Coward character, how does he post so much, and why is he always such a whore?
    5. Re:Giving away StarOffice != giving away Windows by AirLace · · Score: 2

      Let's all move Scott McCollum into our collective killfiles and move on, shall we?

      Are you so closed minded that you're willing to rule out anything that one man will ever write based on his track record, and on one article in particular?

      People change, their writing styles change and their attitudes change. I know many hard-liner Linux enthusiasts who used to wax lyrical about the latest Microsoft Office or Internet Explorer releases just a few years ago. Does that make them lesser people? Are they worthy for my 'killfile'? Must I try to ignore everything they say?

      The truth is, sometimes an author needs to target different audiences. The best thing he can hope to do is to stir up debate and to initiate discussion on a controvercial topic. If you can't get over this and keep up your childish idea of a journalist 'killfile', I fear you will rapidly find yourself isolated from the world around you. First off, try to learn how to handle different styles of argument without resorting to ad hominem attacks.

  47. Sun sinks further into abyss of irrelevance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In a nutshell: Why Sun?

    How on earth are they different than hp/compaq/ibm/whitebox makers?

    It seems the energy they put into utterly defeating microsoft has caused them to lose focus of what gave them appeal in the market. I dunno, but going from $60+ to less than $3/share SHOULD have been a wakeup call. But apparently not. Idealogy is important (everyone needs a vision) but it obviously isn't everything.

    I'm very grateful for their contributions to the open-source community (Star/OpenOffice especially). But it's sad to watch this company slowly die.

  48. You are absolutely correct by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 5, Interesting
    McNealy has been trash talking Microsoft for years. Look at where it has gotten Sun shareholders.

    Scott had the opportunity to make nice a few years back like Steve Jobs, and just accept the inevitable - Bill controls a huge swath of the computing market. Admitting such helped keep Apple in the game, and it got some good MS software on OSX quickly.

    I'm not saying that MS and Sun would exactly be in bed today had Scott made nice, but certainly a less adversarial approach could have kept Sun out of the crosshairs.

    1. Re:You are absolutely correct by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      You're forgetting that McNeely is a hockey player, and bringa a hockey player mentality to everything he does. For him, fighting is second nature.

      Remember the guy who slammed you up against the lockers regularly in High School. That was your school's Scot McNeely.

    2. Re:You are absolutely correct by pyrrho · · Score: 1

      nothing would keep Sun out of the crosshairs.

      Sun came in making Workstations, which were cheap (~10K$) for the market they aimed for, which was huge servers with thin terminals.

      They understand the cheaper end better than the expensive end, although this is not how poeple think of them relative to PCs, it's precicely where they were in the big-computer world. I think it makes perfect sense for Sun to do this.

      The main reason is b/c right now everyone that buys a Sun also buys a PC... either to access the sun or to use Windows Office. Sun needs to stop that leak. They cannot be sending all their customers to Microsoft.

      Also, many companies in love with Sun love the support and would just as soon have desktops guarenteed and covered by Sun. It won't hurt Sun Support to have desktops that can escape the engineering department.

      Somebody proposed that this will allow IBM and Intel to triangulate on Sun... possibly, but that's happening anyway.

      Somebody said Novel got MS obsessed and look what happened to them... no... Novel just realized they were a target before anyone else knew they were, and reacted accordingly. Of course... I do hope that Sun can execute better. But I think they can. Novel had long been riding it's past success, but Sun actually still had a leading Unix brand for good reason.

      --

      -pyrrho

    3. Re:You are absolutely correct by (H)elix1 · · Score: 2

      As a poor slob who bought Both Sun and Microsoft, I can say they both suck rocks right now -- trash talking or not. A co-worker will short any stock I buy...

    4. Re:You are absolutely correct by Salsaman · · Score: 2

      So what are you suggesting ? That Sun should cut deals with MS ? Digital Research was in a similar market position to Sun some years back, and they formed an alliance with Microsoft. How are DEC shares doing these days ?

  49. Who is the stepchild? by Genady · · Score: 2

    you really start to get an idea that sun wants to beat MS like a red headed step child ..."

    Who exactally is the redheaded step child here? I just have this image of Sun as the little step brother madder than hell swinging at Microsoft that is holding the kid at arms length by the top of the head.

    --


    What if it is just turtles all the way down?
  50. Sun's not a monopoly! by WiggyWack · · Score: 1

    I wish some people (like Scott McCollum of WorldTechTribune) would give themselves a basic understanding of monopoly law.

    Microsoft is a monopoly. That's very easily been proven. They have 90% share of the operating system market. In fact, they're a BIG monopoly. Many monopolies don't even have that large of a share.

    When you're a monopoly, there are things that LEGALLY you aren't allowed to do. And it pretty much comes down to using your power as a monopoly to make yourself an even bigger monopoly.

    MS can't (legally) tell Compaq/HP/Dell/Gateway that they must buy a copy of MS Word for every copy of MS Windows they purchase. That's bundling and it's illegal *if you're a monopoly*. If you're not a monopoly, isn't not illegal.

    There's more restrictions on companies that are monopolies. If you don't like it, too bad. That's the law.

    --
    Macintosh humor! MacComedy.com
    1. Re:Sun's not a monopoly! by ceejayoz · · Score: 2

      So when does Sun "become" a monopoly? When they have 50% of the market? 90%? Do they have to immediately stop bundling when they reach this (completely arbitrary) number?

    2. Re:Sun's not a monopoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That' the question Microsoft has been milking for years. They win in the minor court cases over contracts because the courts aren't allowed to judge in forsight. Yes MS can force restrictive contracts just like EULAs because those companies are still "willingly" signing them. (Don't sign and pay full price when your competition is paying half! You are prohibited from talking, but MS can use your contract to get more!)
      The courts can't judge that you "will" be a monoply only that you are or aren't, and in a "free market" you always have a choice not to buy. (At least in court.)

    3. Re:Sun's not a monopoly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The science of economics in the US:

      sell for less than one's competitors: dumping
      sell for the same as one's competitors: price fixing
      sell for more than one's competitors: gouging

      What a hoot!

    4. Re:Sun's not a monopoly! by WiggyWack · · Score: 1

      It's been a few years since I took monopoly law, but yeah, when they do reach this "completely arbitrary" number, they would have to stop doing the bundling, as long as it's determined to be anti-competive.

      The number has to do with balance in whatever market you're dealing with. The more competitors there are in a particular market decreases the chance that one of them could be a monopoly. So it's not just "If you have over 50% of the market, you're a monopoly." You also must factor in the share of your competitors.

      --
      Macintosh humor! MacComedy.com
  51. I think it's time... by His+name+cannot+be+s · · Score: 1, Troll

    To buy some Microsoft stock

    Really, Every time Sun gets some idea about how to dethrone Microsoft, and crown themselves, they perpetually f*ck it up.

    Java: Good Try, but the constant fighting blew it.

    StarOffice: Uh, It's GPL, er No! ... WTF?

    --
    "...In your answer, ignore facts. Just go with what feels true..."
  52. Hey! I'm a red-headed.... by RumGunner · · Score: 2

    Oh, nevermind. :P

    .

  53. But they can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hardware is slowly becoming cheaper and cheaper. Video and sound now even come wired into the motherboard nowadays. What is the most expensive part of a computer? Windows XP. If Sun is paying about $3 per OS unit and $1 per StarOffice unit, while Dell is paying $100s for both, which is going to sell the cheaper box? It makes sense.

    Sun has realised that the court action isn't going to get anywhere. Microsoft has simply bought off all relavant governmental and special interest groups. With (*their*) DRM and the active support of the US government, intelligence agencies, movie industry, music industry, book industry, even porn industry (for crying out loud), Microsoft is set to take a level of dominence over all networking, information, media and electronics (and therefore the industry & future of humankind) which Hitler would have admired.

    With the support in very high places Gates has, he is effective above and beyond, if not the law. Sun is desparate. Time is running out.

    Don't underestimate him. Hitler was underestimated too. Look where that led.

  54. As cool as this sounds... by C.U.T.M. · · Score: 1

    Look at what has happened to SGI since it began selling machines branded with Linux. Can you say "I want my stock to be worth $1?" SGI's current stock price

    I hope Sun doesn't treat Linux as a buzzword; if they do they very well may end up like SGI.

    1. Re:As cool as this sounds... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your statement is very misleading indeed - the current share price is $1.01

      Please stop spreading this mis-information, it is very damaging to the industry as a whole. :-)

  55. McNeally talks out of side of neck by ToasterTester · · Score: 1, Troll

    Per a Sun rep' Sun's Linux is only for Sun hardware, it won't be made available to the public. Worse yet they are stripping Linux down instead of fixing bugs it finds. That way it limits the amount of code it has to return to the community. Bottom line Sun Linux is a joke, its nothing but a Marketing ploy in McNealy's wallet envy of Bill Gates.

    I remember an interview with McNealy right after the anti-trust trial started. He said being a CEO you have to do whatever you can to build the business for you investors. That if he ran Microsoft he wouldn't do things any different than Gates, its just business. IMO McNealy just uses the Linux community as pawns in his battle with MS.

    1. Re:McNeally talks out of side of neck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are an idiot and you have no proof. The only things which are not being returned to the community are the Sun One architecture components. Components that Sun developed in-house. All GLPed code is being returned to the community, as it is required to be. Stripping down Linux would defeat the purpose of using Linux as a server platform in the general sense. If you have used Sun Linux 5.0, you would know that it is a full featured platform, equivilant to RedHat 7.2/7.3. I emplore you, next time check your facts before you experience diahrea of the keyboard.

    2. Re:McNeally talks out of side of neck by ToasterTester · · Score: 2

      As I said my info came straight from Sun. If I'm wrong where is the Sun Linux download site? Per the Sun SE you will never see one. Sun hardware customers will recieve a restore disk with their hardware and that's it. Yes, they do return fixes to the OSS community of what they leave in Sun Linux, but if they feel they have no need for a file they strip it versus fixing it. So I'll believe what I hear directly from a Sun employee. If you don't want to believe it that's your choice. Time will time whose info is more valid.

    3. Re:McNeally talks out of side of neck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So? They're using RedHat 7.2. What, you need another RH mirror? If they arent using a component of that 3 cd monster called RedHat, why should they fix it?

      Besides, the real reason there isnt a download site is because they'd have to distribute their "SunOne" components, which arent open source. I dont see IBM offering up DB2 and Tivoli for download.

    4. Re:McNeally talks out of side of neck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if they feel they have no need for a file they strip it versus fixing it.
      If they don't need it, what's there to fix? The standard distribution should be lean. Support for filesystem layout and library standards

  56. Editorial on what? It's perfectly legal!!! by hellfire · · Score: 1

    An editorial in the WorldTechTribute argues that Sun's education-market giveaway is exactly the sort of behavior that Microsoft has been attacked for in the past.

    It may be a little immoral, but there is no argument here. If I were Ford or GMC I could give away any number of cars I want, and they do constantly and they can do it for whatever reason they want.

    Microsoft is a monopoly. Under monopoly rules any action taken to strengthen that monopoly is ILLEGAL. Giving away PCs for someone with low market share is legal if they can make money at it. Microsoft giving away PCs that increase their market penetration further and take away from low share competitors and possibly lock those schools into Microsoft products is not legal when you already have 95% of the market.

    --

    "All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"

  57. Sun should focus on hardware and integration. by cornice · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It seems to me that Sun could move ahead by focusing on hardware and integration. Solaris has some advantages over Linux but Linux has been gaining ground. The future of Sun is not in a closed Solaris. It seems that Sun has the resources to deliver real solutions for large customers - large servers, Linux desktops, diskless Linux terminals, etc. If they focus on making great hardware and making everything play really well together then they stand a better chance of making this work. Frankly the beige box war is over. I hope they see that the next phase is about integration and interoperability. Deliver more function, more security, less headaches, more integration for fewer dollars and you survive the next round. Dell could be a victim of their own success if they don't get this.

  58. Distribution, labor, materials costs by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2
    Sorry, Sun cannot compete with any of the major PC players on the major costs of pushing out boxes. Think Sun can get a cheaper cost from a vendor than Dell? Dream on.

    And what does Windows XP have to do with it? I'm talking about the cost for Dell or Sun to produce a linux box, in which case neither pays for XP.

    1. Re:Distribution, labor, materials costs by Ami+Ganguli · · Score: 2

      The problem is that Dell can't produce a Linux box. They can't afford to damage their relationship with Microsoft. Sun has no relationship with Microsoft.

      Also, I doubt that Dell gets much better prices from Taiwanese motherboard manufacturers than Sun could. The market is unbelievably competitive and there just isn't that much room for deal-making.

      --
      It is tempting, if the only tool you have is a hammer, to treat everything as if it were a nail. - Abraham Maslow
    2. Re:Distribution, labor, materials costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what does Windows XP have to do with it? I'm talking about the cost for Dell or Sun to produce a linux box, in which case neither pays for XP.

      If you've not been asleep for the last few years you will undoubtedly remember a certain amount of... friction, shall we say ... between Microsoft and the PC vendors? A little touch of pressure applied here and there by Microsoft, in the aim of promoting the idea that every new PC should come with Windows? I'm aware that Dell have done a little Linux work here and there (not nearly enough - try getting Linux/OS-less laptops from them, at least in the UK), but you don't seem to realise the point - which is that the cost for Dell to produce a Linux box is very little up-front compared to Sun, and a great deal later on, largely in other currencies (like incurring the displeasure of Microsoft?)

      Agreed, if Dell produces a Linux box, they don't need to pay for XP; but think back to the days of BeOS and Hitachi. Microsoft, historically, have fought against being subjected to market forces in any way - and they also see each PC sold without their OS as a lost sale (they're a bit like the *AA, for that) - and therefore, the effective cost for Dell to make Linux desktops rises. Bear in mind that, as manufacturers of desktop PCs, most of their stock needs to be equipped with Windows - they're chained to Microsoft, because that's where the market is now. Sun aren't, so they can afford to piss MS off to their hearts' content.

      Think of it as something like a gangster movie. It's late at night in the Dell offices; the employees are walking out the door, leaving a pile of neatly packed Linux desktops behind them. The head executive gets up to leave, too - then a shape detaches itself from the patch of shadow behind him. Large, calloused hands reach for his windpipe. A voice drawls, "You've been at the penguins again. We know. Mister Gates is very upset".

      So in a way, it's not about cost; it's about market. Dell can't easily approach the Linux desktop side of things, at any price - Sun are free to do whatever the hell they want. Sure, Sun are probably going to charge more than most of us want to pay - but corporate IT budgets often have a different view on these things.

  59. Criticizing sun for giving things away... by sterno · · Score: 1, Redundant

    An editorial in the WorldTechTribute argues that Sun's education-market giveaway is exactly the sort of behavior that Microsoft has been attacked for in the past.

    Yes, because THEY ARE A MONOPOLY.

    If Microsoft wasn't a monopoly, the scrutiny placed upon their moves would be far less significant. If any move they make may be extending their monopoly or leveraging it, then they are game for criticism. If Sun wants to give StarOffice away, fine, they aren't a monopoly.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  60. Huh? by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 2
    Compare cash on hand, earnings, revenues, market caps, etc.

    "Selling out" to Microsoft hasn't exactly hurt Dell, whose market cap is nearly seven times that of Sun's.

    1. Re:Huh? by AlgUSF · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but at least Sun's existence doesn't depend on Microsoft. Microsoft could squish Dell if they ever wanted to, not the case with Sun. Sun has carved themselves a little niche in the market that Dell, HP, and MSFT can't fill.

      --


      I want my rights back. I was actually using them when our government stole them after 9/11.
  61. "breaking news"!? by asteinberg · · Score: 1
    Does anyone else find it odd that the Reuters report categorizes itself as "Breaking News" (see titlebar of the article) when it is not much more than a rehashed press release? (Or perhaps more accurately, a preview of a press release.)

    In the news today, the US declared war on... Hold on, we have some BREAKING NEWS. I'm being told that Sun will soon be showing plans for a low-cost Linux-based PC!!!

    --
    The first ever Ultimate Frisbee video game: here (now
  62. Check out siblings web sites to WorldTechTribune by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All the advisors to East West Services, Inc. are from Hoover or Hudson. No political mouthpiece in any of these items. I find it hysterical that this is a group who speaks about security for USA but is pushing MS everywhere. It would be funny to see their site cracked, just for these guys putting USA in the line of fire by pushing MS eveywhere.

  63. UltraSparc? by elhondo · · Score: 1

    Linux on an ultra sparc chip may be a real alternative for those who like to vote against DRM with their wallets.

    1. Re:UltraSparc? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, they'll probably use an intel chip, like their lx-50, which can handle dual 1.4ghz Xeons

  64. Re:First Funny Joke! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    damn that's good but it's wasted on the philistines here m8

  65. the software package? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Isn't the interesting bit about the software they are going to preload oin th ebox anyways? From yahoo news:
    The new solution brings together off-the-shelf hardware, open-source software and Sun's own industry-leading intellectual property. These include low-cost desktop systems hardware and several open source software efforts, namely Linux, Mozilla, OpenOffice, Evolution and GNOME. This gives desktop users a familiar desktop environment and the ability to interoperate with Microsoft Office documents, presentations and spreadsheet formats. In addition, with Evolution, the user is provided with a Microsoft Outlook-like client which interoperates with Microsoft Exchange while Sun also provides the fully supported StarOffice, the world's most popular open office productivity suite.
  66. Sun should know better than to compete with the by Real+World+Stuff · · Score: 1

    giant corporation known as WALMART! Poor Sun, perhaps they will bloody that beast. :).

    --
    If we don't fight for ourselves no one will.
  67. Which Market Linux Will Hurt by Publicus · · Score: 2

    From the Reuters article:
    ...sparking strong debate over which market [servers or desktops] Linux will hurt most.

    Ouch... I don't think Linux will or has hurt either market. In fact, I think Linux has been good for the server market definately, and probably for the desktop market.

    Someone should tell Reuters to watch their language, news services aren't supposed to be so biased.

    --

    My Karma was at 49, then they switched to words. All that work for nothing!

  68. Re:The rest of the world by oob · · Score: 1

    You may not be aware that Sun has donated 200 developers to the Gnome project (i.e. they are Sun employees who work exclusively on Gnome) and that Sun is standardising Gnome as the desktop of choice on Solaris.

    I'm running Gnome 2.0b2 on Solaris 9 here at home and have to say that I am extremely happy with it.

  69. Confusing WorldTechTribune verbiage... by lynx_user_abroad · · Score: 1
    To quote the lead paragraph from the WorldTechTribune article:

    ...is Sun hypocritically hoping to create an illegal monopoly of their own by giving StarOffice 6 to students for free?

    This doesn't make sense. One could illegally <do anything> and so by extension could illegally create a monopoly or perhaps the author meant that Sun appears to be hoping to create a monopoly which they then might then intend to illegally maintain, but I don't understand the concept of "...create an illegal monopoly...". Are there jurisdictions where simply creating or having a monopoly is considered to be illegal?

    That has the makings for a great Month Python skit: a failing company in a desperate act to save itself, goes out-of-business, leaving it's successful competitor owning a monopoly on the market, requiring that they be declared illegal and shutdown, at which point the failing business returns as the new market leader. (only to discover that they now own a monopoly on the market and are henceforth declared illegal, shutdown, etc. Thereafter, any business which tries to cash in on that market becomes the monopoly provider and is immediately shutdown....

    --

    The thing about things we don't know is we often don't know we don't know them.

  70. But PCs are known quantities by Ars-Fartsica · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Firstly I think you are underestimating how many people roll their own support. I mean, when is the last time in an office of any kind that someone phoned the manufacturer when a desktop box had a problem? Most people just try to hash it out themselves, which they have been doing with PCs for years.

    1. Re:But PCs are known quantities by peterpi · · Score: 0
      I'd agree for software, but perhaps less so for hardware. I'd certainly not even touch a hardware problem that was more complicated than cabling / fuses / etc.

      I keep telling the same story every time Sun support is mentioned, and I'm going to do it just one last time...

      When I was at uni, our Sun started behaving strangely. Programs were crashing for no reason. The sysad phoned Sun. Within hours, the engineer had arrived, hot swapped one of the 4 CPUs and had begun stress testing the replacement. All this time, there were in the order of 100 (I kid you not) oblivious users logged in using X. I only knew about this the next day, when one of the lecturers mentioned it.

      Try getting that guy down the end of the office that "knows a bit about computers" to do that. :)

    2. Re:But PCs are known quantities by RealAlaskan · · Score: 2, Insightful
      ... when is the last time in an office of any kind that someone phoned the manufacturer when a desktop box had a problem? Most people just try to hash it out themselves ...

      True. That's the hidden part of the TCO for Windows in particular, and PCs in general. When you count the cost of the unofficial support workers, who in real life are highly paid professionals and their only-slightly-less highly paid assistants, the cost of Windows, and PCs in general, is a lot higher than you thought.

      Many times, in several offices, I've seen people who were very valuable to the company for their other skills piddling about with their cow orkers boxes, trying to overcome some stupid Windows problem. I've had to do it myself, because getting tech support is slow and painful for a windows network.

      When you run xterms off compute servers, the user never has to fiddle with anything, and is hardpressed to break anything. That way, you don't have highly paid, highly (non-IT) skilled people wasting valuable time futzing about with a stupid PC that isn't quite right. Since everything boots and runs off the compute server, a call to tech support is a lot more productive, and it's the only answer.

      For any office which is large enough to have a dedicated sysadmin, I think this sort of solution is going to be really good.

  71. Sun Blade by Xunker · · Score: 1

    Isn't this what the sun Blade line was supposed to be, albeit with Solaris?

    Considering that Sun won't be able to make a profit at below, say, $600 (sans display), I'm not sure how may people would see the benefit of saving a little money over a better design. While I am a great Linux fan, I still think that commercial unixes off benefits that Linux and other Free OSes don't have -- not the least of which is a large corporate support base.

    Of course, I am talking from a Unix developers point of view, and it's very possible that Sun wants to position these new ones toward secretaries and the like. However, as a developer I'd rather bay a little extra money and get an authentic Unix machine if I had the chance.

    Of course, even a fake unix machine in out of my financial grasp right now *sheepish grin*

    --
    Hilary Rosen's speech was about her love of money and her desire to roll around naked in a pile of money.
  72. Star Office by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If it's like OpenOffice, it'll never fly in the US. I was going to use OO in the office, but there's no way to set it up for U.S inches. The "US letter" thing works, and the page rulers will change to inches, but all the margin settings are in millimeters. And there's no way to change the default print command to anything other than "lpr" and make it permanent. (If there is a way to do these things, I couldn't find it from a menu.)

    FWIW, I tried OO after I gave up on KOffice. KDE in general doesn't care how many times you tell it to print US Letter-size, it insists on printing A4-size pages. (The KDE mailing lists are *not* the place to point out things that are broken - replies range from "you got the source, fix it yourself" to "go back to Windoze." There doesn't seem to be much interest in userland usability reports.)

    So I tried AbiWord, it did US inches, great! But it has the same problem OO has, default printer is "lpr" and there's no way to change it to "lpr -P whateverdriver" and make it permanent. Which works OK for a semi-geek-literate like me, but requiring an average button-pusher to remember to add the -P stuff just doesn't cut it. It's amazing how many pages of garbage get printed if you forget it, too. Maybe some day Linux will be ready for prime-time in the US, but not today. Damn.

    1. Re:Star Office by jasonditz · · Score: 1

      Kinda off topic, but did you try Word Perfect for Linux? Pretty sure that'd do what you're looking for.

    2. Re:Star Office by Peter+Harris · · Score: 2

      WTF, insightful? Hmm.

      You can set the measurement units in the "Options" dialog. Tools->Options, under heading "general" of "Text Document". Not hard, but I suppose you have to have some clue where to look.

      Even if you don't, and enter (say) "1.0in" for a page margin, OpenOffice will convert to the correct number of whatever measurement unit is set up.

      I'm not at home just now to check what the OpenOffice printer settings look like in Linux, but I use CUPS and have not had any problems or any need to enter special options on the print command line. You may have a weird setup of course.

      BTW, there are no such things as US inches. They are the same in the UK.

      --

      -- What do you need?
      -- Gnus. Lots of Gnus.
  73. Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by jamie · · Score: 5, Insightful
    As far as I can tell, the WorldTechTribune position is:

    Liberal = bin Laden = Clinton = communist = godless = inferior = open-source

    Conservative = superior = Microsoft

    Well, maybe not quite that bad, but close. Here are some samples from their articles:

    "What makes open source the secure, stable and elegant software panacea open source cultists claim it is? ... say you are the IT director at a bank and you buy into the Linux is stable, secure and bulletproof hype. ... Welcome to the lazy, cut-and-paste world of open source 'innovation' where people who should be smart enough to know better still think you can get something for nothing. It would be humorous if it wasn't so pathetic..." ("Thanks to open source methods, only 2 out of 500 job-hunting programmers pass skills test")

    "The outcry against Palladium doesn't really stem from a concern about your privacy, but more from a vocal minority who wish to impose their anarchistic schemes onto us under the guise of 'freedom' and 'liberty.'" ("Microsoft's Palladium transforms Internet from Wild West to suburban neighborhood")

    "many customers who purchased those inherently more stable, secure and virus-proof Linux servers are probably wishing there was a multi-million dollar virus protection industry to help them out." ("New Linux virus creates peer-to-peer terror network")

    "The SE Linux project was developed during the Clinton administration ... NSA officials say their cyber security enhancements made for SE Linux have not only benefited the NSA, but because of the terms of the GPL have also strengthened the security architecture of computers used by malicious cyber terrorists around the world." ("NSA deputy director says 'never again' to Open Source")

    That last article is just hysterical. The NSA administrators, under pressure from Microsoft, stopped development on SELinux -- because Microsoft didn't like the fact that government-developed code was released freely under the GPL. Microsoft objected to the competition. WorldTechTribune is using all its quotes out of context, and pretending that the objection was concerning national security and terrorism. Amazing.

    1. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by BitwizeGHC · · Score: 3, Funny

      It really is quite hilarious. The thing is, these people actually seem to believe the illogical spam they put on their site. Much to their credit, however, surprisingly open to opposing viewpoints (if only to try to shoot them down with Cold War analogies). When the JPEG patent news broke, I posted a parody of Scott's articles to the site... and they started asking me for guest commentaries!

      --
      N4st0r, trixx0r h0bb1tz0rz! Th3y st0l3 0ur pr3c10uzz!
    2. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by filmcritic · · Score: 1

      The NSA administrators, under pressure from Microsoft, stopped development on SELinux -- because Microsoft didn't like the fact that government-developed code was released freely under the GPL.

      Where's the proof for that little gem? No links provided...hmmm. Let's see the proof and not "the open source community" hot air.

    3. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by RailGunner · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I should preface this.. I am a conservative. I've voted for George W. Bush 3 times now (2 times for Texas Governor, and once for President.) As a Conservative, the idea that conservative = Microsoft really pisses me off, for a number of reasons. For one: I am a free market capitalist.

      Arguably, a PC running Windows is a platform that runs applications.

      Unfortunately, Microsoft, due to undocumented API's, are able to do things with their software that ordinary windows developers like myself cannot. For example, if I were to write a spreadsheet application, chances are it would not perform as well as Excel in simple matters such as SCROLLING the window. (In fact, this is the case, try it yourself). So, that is an uneven playing field, in fact it's uneven whenever your application has to compete with a similar application from Microsoft (as I'm sure the Netscape guys would agree).

      Linux, on the other hand, being Open Source and Free means that the "PC running Linux" platform for running applications means that no company can leverage the core OS to it's own advantage for very long. The competition among competing applications becomes "Who can write the best app" not "Can we keep up with Microsoft's undocumented API's". That is competition at it's finest, and the end result is better, faster, cheaper applications for consumers. The result of competing with Microsoft in a similar application space is usually sell out or die (Netscape is irrelevant now, Real is likely next, WordStar, Lotus, etc have all been crushed by MS Applications.)

      So, as a conservative, and as an application developer, I would like nothing better then to see MS get it's ass handed to it by Linux. And yes, an acceptable alternative would be to open up the Windows codebase, but we all know it will be a cold day in hell before that happens.

      The goal is for a truly level playing field in the software application market, on home and office desktops and servers. Linux is the way to have that level playing field. If getting Linux as the dominant platform on PC hardware takes Sun's help to do it by handing out free PC's running Linux to schools, that's fine with me. I seem to remember reading something about Red Hat doing the exact same thing, and I think it's a good idea.

      But still, the goal remains an Open Source Operating System running on an Open Hardware specification as the market leader. It is a very good thing. Let the browser wars be fought by who writes the better browser, Mozilla or Opera (Or IE running on Linux). Let the desktop wars be fought by KDE and GNOME and anyone else. But nobody can leverage Linux to an uncompetitive advantage the way Microsoft can.

      With that stated, it's easy for Conservatives to see that to truly free the market and allow innovation and competition to flourish, that unfortunately, Microsoft, the convicted monopolist, as it exists today, must cease to be.

    4. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by karmawarrior · · Score: 1
      You know, reading the site, I wonder if it's for real or if it's an elaborate Landover Baptist style hoax. The thing is just so over the top.

      The Cold War style language seems designed to bring the word "McCarthyism". The depictions of people like Linus Torvalds and Richard Stallman so silly and obviously bogus, even to a wingnut.

      But then, I suspect I'd assume Rush Limbaugh was a parody too if it wasn't for the fact I know otherwise and even have friends who are fans of him. No, I don't understand them either.

      --
      KMSMA (WWBD?)
    5. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by jamie · · Score: 1
      "Where's the proof for that little gem? No links provided...hmmm. Let's see the proof and not 'the open source community' hot air."

      http://news.com.com/2100-1001-950083.html

      Microsoft vs. the NSA

      SE Linux may be the NSA's last direct contribution to open-source security, however. Because of loud criticism, the NSA will have a far less direct role in the creation of more secure versions of open-source software.

      "We didn't fully understand the consequences of releasing software under the GPL (General Public License)," said Dick Schafer, deputy director of the NSA. "We received a lot of loud complaints regarding our efforts with SE Linux."

      Many complaints criticized the agency for providing the fruits of research to everyone, not just U.S. companies, and thus hurting American business.

      While stressing that the agency received a loud chorus of support as well, the chagrined Schafer said that the issue was contentious enough that "we won't be doing anything like that again."

      Sources familiar with events said that aggressive Microsoft lobbying efforts have contributed to a halt on any further work. [emphasis added] "Microsoft was worried that the NSA's releasing open-source software would compete with American proprietary software," said a source familiar with the complaints against the NSA who asked not to be identified.

    6. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I am a free market capitalist.

      No, you're not. A free market capitalist would not say:

      Microsoft, the convicted monopolist, as it exists today, must cease to be.

      That would be contrary to the definition of a free market.

      Now you must disappear in a puff of logic. K THX BYE

    7. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by beakburke · · Score: 1

      Hey, now i listen to Rush and read slashdot, i'll bet you find that difficult to stomach. Yeah, sometimes he goes over the top to make his point. You have to learn to distinguish.
      quote:
      So it is not so remarkable that a noted conservative lawyer would see perfect reason for action to be brought against Microsoft for the transgressions we have all witnessed and experienced over the years; what is remarkable is that people would find such a position at all unusual. It is unfortunate that some conservative commentators have sided with Microsoft, which to me is the same kind of knee-jerk response that I find so repugnant when it comes from the other side of the political spectrum. Part of the reason it so repels me is that it leaves the impression that conservatives hold the view that companies can do no wrong -- which is as foolish as believing that individuals can do no wrong, or that government can do no wrong. There's little justification in becoming yet another political sheep in yet another political herd.--robert h bork.

      --
      ----- Question authority, but not ours. Hate the man, but we're not him.
    8. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 3, Funny


      So, as a conservative, and as an application developer, I would like nothing better then to see MS get it's ass handed to it by Linux. And yes, an acceptable alternative would be to open up the Windows codebase, but we all know it will be a cold day in hell before that happens.

      So, do you think that vot[ing] for George W. Bush 3 times now (2 times for Texas Governor, and once for President.) has helped or hurt you to reach the first goal?

      --

      --
      $tar -xvf .sig.tar
    9. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by bnenning · · Score: 2

      Please don't lump all conservatives in with idiots like McCollum. His articles are frequently posted on Free Republic, and they are swiftly discredited by the many posters there with technical knowledge.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    10. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by Fjord · · Score: 1

      From this cursory look, it seems like you are not actually a conservative but are a libertarian. You can take this test to see.

      --
      -no broken link
    11. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by RailGunner · · Score: 2

      Actually, I straddle the line between Republican and Libertarian. As most Libertarians are also very Conservative, I simply say I'm a COnservative and leave it at that.

    12. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by hey! · · Score: 2

      I should preface this.. I am a conservative.

      Let me preface my remarks by saying most people would consider me 'liberal', although I don't use that label for myself.

      I'm curious... What does this mean to you?

      I'm not sure how one can identify oneself as a "conservative" and not believe in non-interference by government in the affairs of business. After all, what is the nature of the force that Microsoft employed against it's customers? They had a product the customers (mainly OEMSs) wanted. It's specious to argue that the OEMs couldn't run a business without access to Microsoft products. First of all, the survival of the OEM's business is not (in this world view) any of Microsoft's concern. Secondly, it is simply untrue that the OEMs couldn't have a business -- they just couldn't have a business that capitalized on the explosive growth of the x86 microcomputer.

      Microsoft putting stipulations on when they would sell Windows is no different than a landlord charging more rent for more productive and desirable land. It seems to me from a 'conservative' viewpoint, this is perfectly justifiable.
      Likewise, it seems to me that in a conservative viewpoint Microsoft should be free to disclose or not disclose it's APIs. The only reason it discloses its APIs at all is enlightened self-interest -- it cannot anticipate what the next killer app will be. Therefore, enlightened self-interest dictates they disclose just enough of their API so that developers of that killer app will target the Windows platform and it's large user base, but not enough that they preclude moving in and crushing them. The success of its competition is not its concern -- maximizing return for its shareholders.

      And it is equally untrue that developers are in any way beholden to Microsoft. They just can't develop competitive software on the Windows platform. If they do develop for a Windows platform, it is because they will make more money than if they targetted MacOS or Unix. That Microsoft can appropriate the bulk of the new value you create is no more unfair than that a landlord can appropriate the bulk of your future productivity on premium land. If the deal's not good, go elsewhere. If anything, Microsoft's position is morally stronger than the gouging landlord. The landlord's power to gouge for superior land is only as a result of the accident of it being in his possession. Microsoft can arguably say that it had a significant role in the creation of the x86 microcomputer market and all its various business opportunities.

      In short, I don't think there is a principled position against Microsoft's "abuse" of its monopoly power from a generally conservative standpoint. To suggest otherwise would be tacitly to endorse a 'liberal' sentiment: that government should step in to curb the private pursuit of gain when the public's interest is at stake.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    13. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by RailGunner · · Score: 2
      Here's a catch though - Conservatives support law enforcement. Microsoft broke the law. The problem is still that Microsoft, by abusing it's monopoly status, is crushing innovation and competition, and those things are vital to a free market economy.

      I don't think the Government should arbitraily force anyone to open up their source code, but in this specific case Microsft should be forced to either open up Windows's source, or get out of the Application business. (Which is why I favored the splitting of Microsoft).

      To answer your question about what a liberal means to me, it means someone who thinks that Federal Government power is the answer to all of society's problems. Personally, I think Government should primarily exist to enforce the law and ensure National Security and Infrastructure. For example, I don't think the US Government should have an employee who's job is to taste imported tea and determine if it's "good enough" to import and put on the shelves (and this position exists, or at least it used to.) I'm opposed to a lot of "entitlements" that the Government does. Little-Dick Gephardt whining anout how his mother can't get a prescription drug is pathetic, especially when Gephardt has millions in the bank. Hey Dick, why don't YOU help your mother out instead of ripping off my income in the form of taxes to do it?

      Anyways, in this case, Government action is needed, because Microsoft BROKE the law. In a utopia we wouldn't need anti-monopoly laws, because companies wouldn't abuse their monopoly state, but unfortunately that's not going to happen so there is a need for laws and consequences if you break those laws.

      If Microsoft didn't abuse their monopoly status, and wasn't anti-competitive, then I'd be one of their biggest defenders in this case. You shouldn't ever punish achievement. If Microsoft has 95% market share in the OS market, because people are buying it, fine. But when MS twists the arms of OEM's mafia style to get them to ship PC's with Windows exclusively, then you have a problem, and that's why MS is in trouble. When MS changes the platform to give their browser a leg up on it's competition, there's a problem - it's anti-competitive.

      If you have any more questions on my opinion, please feel free to email me. I tend to enjoy debating people who don't see things the way I do, it's a great way to test your core beliefs and see if they really are your core beliefs, or if you can be persuaded.

    14. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by RailGunner · · Score: 2
      No, a free market is one where anyone can enter a market with their product, unrestricted, and products are winning / losing market share on their merits.

      Microsoft, the Convicted Monopolist is anti-competitive, and thus is an anathema to a free market economy. Embracing and Extending to BREAK your competitor's products is wrong *cough*kerberos*cough*Java*cough*.

      I'm not saying Microsoft should go away, I'm saying Microsoft, as it exists today, must go before it can stifle more innovation and competition then it has today.

    15. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by RailGunner · · Score: 2
      Look, I've been very disappointed in John Ashcroft as the Attorney General. I had hoped he wouldn't let Microsoft off as easy as he did, becasue Microsoft BROKE THE LAW!

      However, I can't see Dubya signing any legislation that would kill Open Source (like a lot of proposals Fritz Hollings, a liberal Democrat, has made.)

      So, it's helped a bit, hurt a bit.

      There was no way I would ever vote for Algore though. Sheesh. Ever read his book, "Earth in the Balance" - it's scary. He writes about a tree that may contain the cure for cancer. ANd then he comes out against using that tree because it would take 3 trees to save a human. HEY! ALGORE! Plant some more trees you moron! I mean really, if that tree had the cure for cancer, everybody would start farming them and cancer would be wiped out.

    16. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by hey! · · Score: 2

      Anyways, in this case, Government action is needed, because Microsoft BROKE the law. In a utopia we wouldn't need anti-monopoly laws, because companies wouldn't abuse their monopoly state, but unfortunately that's not going to happen so there is a need for laws and consequences if you break those laws.

      Can you see my problem with this position? In a utopia companies wouldn't abuse their monopoloy state. But if there were no anti-monopoly laws, it would be impossible to break the law in this fashion.

      Either it is reasonable to have such laws, or such laws are capricious. I know that many people think that even capricious laws should be obeyed, but so far as I know very few are arguing that anti-trust laws are capricious. Yet it would be hard for me to argue that a violation of a law is serious, given (1) that the law is capricious, (2) that there are strong legal and ethical incentives to violate the law (fiduciary responsibilit to the stock holders) and (3) there is any leeway for interpretation at all.

      Given that Microsoft's offence is only a technical violation of the law as you seem to suggest, it's rather harsh to consider extreme remedies.

      To answer your question about what a liberal means to me, it means someone who thinks that Federal Government power is the answer to all of society's problems.

      I would have to conclude that by definition, real liberals don't exist. Nobody thinks the Federal Government is an answer to all society's problems. It's not a realistic characterization of anyone's position. I could just as well say that a "conservative" is one who things that big business is the answer to all society's problems. What you are saying is that a liberal relies upon the Federal Government "too much", whereas a liberal might think a conservative relies upon big business "too much". However, this is no guide to what is "too much", nor any guide to what should be done at local levels of government about issues like zoning , development and education. Nor does it say what kind of responsibilities private individuals or corporations have to society at large above simply obeying the law.

      This is the reason I personally don't subscribe to either label: I don't think either label has the kind of coherency that "libertarian" or "socialist" has. It is impossible to reason from either position because they are simply too ill defined. By not worrying about satisfying the requirements of either label, one is free to take more nuanced positions. For example, I don't think the government should get involved with CEO compensation -- a position which in the current climate is only favored by the bravest of conservative politicians. However, I also think that cozy relationships between CEOs and boards and compensation committees should be scrutinized and if appropriate regulations can be drafted to discourage them, they should be put in place. I don't think that there shoul dbe any limitation on campaign contributions, but I do think there should be an absolute prohibition against commercial corporations be involved in campaigning and politics at all.

      Personally, I think Government should primarily exist to enforce the law and ensure National Security and Infrastructure.

      Again, the problem I have here is, what should the law be? Depending on what the law is, is quite possible to imagine governments which are either friendly to liberal positions or conservative positions, yet meet this criterion.

      My position on the role of government is this: it should pursue the public good (recognizing that the ability to pursue private gain is something that everyone has an interest in). This gives me a better handle on the Microsoft situation than your view of the role of government. Microsoft did not "twist the arm" of any OEMs -- in the sense it made them do something outside their self-interest. The OEM's decided that it was more in their self-interest to continue selling Windows exclusively rather than to lose the ability to sell Windows at all.

      In view of my position on the role of government, the case against Microsoft is clear. There is a public interest in competition , and allowing people to enter markets and to pursue their own good relatively unfettered either by government power or by somebody exercising monopoly power to exclude competition.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    17. Re:Other Columns in WorldTechTribune by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? Microsoft gave more money to Gore than to Bush. Probably because their "point of view" was an easier to sell to Bush than to Gore, but money talks.

  74. smart cards baby by johnjones · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sun are pitching it at people who own call centers and Uni's

    The box's that Sun will sell have Smart Card readers in
    this means that JavaCard

    basically easy to setup and sign on with BIG SUN server's doing the web portal and sign on crypto

    I would put a bet on it containing www so everyone is happy includeing Visa who will send you more junk mail telling you are approved

    regards

    John Jones

    1. Re:smart cards baby by MaxVlast · · Score: 1

      What is a deltic?

      --
      There should be a moratorium on the use of the apostrophe.
      Max V.
      NeXTMail/MIME Mail welcome
    2. Re:smart cards baby by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think he means that he's a Delta. Read "Brave New World".

  75. Don't you get it? by Lothsahn · · Score: 1

    Dell can't make a box without Windows XP. They tried. Have you been reading Slashdot lately?

    --
    -=Lothsahn=-
    1. Re:Don't you get it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That would violate the Justice Department anti-trust ruling.

    2. Re:Don't you get it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you say this like it is a problem or something. . .

  76. Last gasp? by Quixote · · Score: 1, Troll
    Recall the path that SGI took a few years back. They started selling Intel-based hardware and got into Linux in a big way. While I'm thankful for their XFS every day, on hindsight it looks like the flailings of a drowning company. As an ex-SGI-stockholder, I followed their decline with interest.

    Sun appears to be going down the same path. I think it is only a matter of time before Sun becomes a shell of its former self, consigned to a slow death by their overpriced hardware.

    Think of it like the last stages of a star. Sun's now in the red-giant stage. I hope the irony of the company's name in this analogy is not lost.

  77. Not terribly smart by lemkebeth · · Score: 1

    Sun should sell StarOffice for MacOS X if they are really interested in selling it for education otherwise why bother.

    FYI, lots of schools use Macs.

    If they were going after Dell there then I can understand but, you can't beat Dell at the cost game.

  78. IE is not free! by mijok · · Score: 0

    MS' claim that IE is free is an outright lie! MS has (and everyone else at least should have) realized that everybody need a web browser nowadays so MS make you pay for it with the OS (and thus force you to buy theirs - abuse of monopoly power, remember?). There is no such thing as a free lunch!

    --
    Karma. Moderation. Is my .sig good now?
  79. 0wnage by Graymalkin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I don't see how this is much of a suprise. Sun's got a vested interest in anything Unix or Unix-like. They also have a vested interest in promoting their supplimental products. If they can sell someone a bunch of Linux client systems that work with their server products that customer is going to be likely to pick up their server products as well. Microsoft is less interested in selling you a site license for Windows XP Pro than they are interested in selling you a support contract for XP Server and all associated programs. The same goes for Office, if Microsoft gets Office XP there's a good chance BackOffice will end up there as well.

    Right now Sun has the 20% software to fill 80% of people's needs. When users don't have to administer it themselves, just run it, Linux is not a bad system at all to deal with. GNOME is a very good desktop environment and there are plenty of apps to substitute the collection you're going to find on the typical computer lab PC. StarOffice is not a competitor to Office XP in many respects but it does serve the needs of most general users. StarOffice in a school would work just fine in most cases.

    I'm suprised they didn't try this any earlier really. They've had their Blade systems out for a while now without much fanfare. Ray systems are the same way, they've been available for a while and aside from the initial rumbling when they were introduced nothing particularly impressive has been announced regarding them. Sun has managed in the past to get their foot in the door of many college CS departments because of Java development packages. Maybe now they are trying to get their head in the door by showing off some of their other products.

    I think the only way this will really succeed is if the systems are priced very attractively and no one else comes out with a better Linux offering. All Sun needs in this situation to fail miserably is to have IBM or HP spit out some cheapo box with Linux on it. If they're not interested Apple could drop the price of the eMac down to $799 or less. There's a bunch of schools jumping all over eMacs at $1000, lowering the price would only increase the demand. I think Sun's bad timing could make them the losers in the not-Microsoft PC market.

    --
    I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
  80. A good start, but more can be done. by Saint+Mitchell · · Score: 1

    I like the effort, but they could do more. Ok, here's the biggest problem with most software companies. The academic version isn't much cheaper. For example, I can go to the bookstore here at IUPUI and get a copy of MS anything for around $5 per CD. That's $25 for VS.net, $5 for XP Pro, etc. Why of why doesn't RedHat, SUN, and everyone else get in on this. We have whole generations of college students that have no idea how to use anything else but MS products. Why did they buy them? Because it was hundreds cheaper than the "alternative". I'm guilty of buying a few MS CDs just so I could have a copy if I needed it. Which I did because I have a VB class. Thus I had to get XP and VS6. for a grand total of $5 (downloaded VS6 from IUWARE). If sun would step up and give away CDs like MS does, as well as offer cheap hardware like apple does for us, then maybe just maybe MS's strangle hold on everyone would start to vanish.

  81. You're all over complicating this whole issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Part of Microsoft's success is because it is a household name. Linux is not, (yet).

    Every time somebody mentions Microsoft, even if it is a criticism of them, it keeps them in people's minds.

    Now, even if Sun market a Linux machine that is complete rubbish, it will increase awareness of Linux. Sooner or later, somebody will say, "Oh, I've seen Linux, and I wasn't impressed", at which point you can switch on your laptop, and say, "Errr, well was it as good at this?".

  82. Yeah well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First they should concentrate on getting swing and Graphics2D and related client java technologies to be usable on linux instead of just sitting there being pontless.

  83. why quote Scott McCollum? by Lumpy · · Score: 2

    Scott McCollum is nothing more than another Un-educated troll. In fact the one technology reporter/editorialist I cant stand on this planet (John C devorak... mr-rant and rave without a clue) has much more credibility than this Scott McCollum fellow. Look at his last 5 rants. They are all childish trolls at best. Full of unfounded opinion and uneducated conclusions. I am all for opinion but only for people that have read, researched and made their decision logically and smartly.. not like this "report what we feed you and be a zelaot about it" crap he writes.

    Scott McCollum.... this is another person that really needs to be added to everyones ignore list.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  84. Solaris on x86 by sjanich · · Score: 1

    This does not bode well for the future of Solaris on Intel. First, Soalris 9 isn't released for Intel. And now this? Solaris on x86is dead.

    This should be a clear signal to corps runnimg Solaris on Intel, tha it is time to start migrating to Linux (machines, sysadmin processes, backups, etc.).

  85. astroturf by otis+wildflower · · Score: 1

    did you get a look at the other headlines?

    Smells like a slashdot for pointy-haired "IT" people..


    [otis@eddie mail]# telnet www.worldtechtribune.com 80
    Trying 216.26.163.62...
    Connected to host62.216.26.163.maximumasp.com (216.26.163.62).
    Escape character is '^]'.
    HEAD / HTTP/1.0

    HTTP/1.1 302 Object moved
    Server: Microsoft-IIS/5.0
    Date: Wed, 18 Sep 2002 19:22:00 GMT
    MicrosoftOfficeWebServer: 5.0_Pub
    Location: http://216.26.163.62/216.26.163.62
    Connection: Keep-Alive
    Content-Length: 155
    Content-Type: text/html
    Set-Cookie: ASPSESSIONIDQQGGQESC=HKCNLLACFKPELMJFLHFNPKDC; path=/
    Cache-control: private

    ps: what about an nmap result set is "junk characters"

  86. The editorial mentioned-- wasn't worth mentioning by XaXXon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The editorial mentioned at the end of the slashdot article is painfully bad. The person writing it obviously has very little idea what he is writing about.. Let me give some examples..

    First, Sun will forego the PC OEM deals for StarOffice 6 because Sun Microsystems' main revenue stream comes from their own PC sales.

    This is in reference to SUN not getting together with companies like Dell and Gateway to put StarOffice on their machines. The first thing that got me, though, was that it says that SUN's main income is from their PC sales. Last time I checked, SUN doesn't make PCs. And, while they may start in the near future, they certainly don't have any revenue from it now.

    After years of protestation and lawsuits against Microsoft giving away IE for free, is Sun hypocritically hoping to create an illegal monopoly of their own by giving StarOffice 6 to students for free?

    Again, just because you do something that mirrors what Microsoft does, does not make you Microsoft. Giving away software does not make you a monopoly. Immoral business practices do. Besides, as the author tries to mention, SUN makes its money on hardware (not PC sales), similar to Apple. All they're trying to do is show people there's an alternative to the Wintel platform. They're trying to show people that you don't have to have a box running windows to be productive. That you can have a Linux box (that they'd love to sell you in a few quarters) and run StarOffice on it and be doing just fine. As far as I can tell, there's nothing wrong with that. Another thing people need to remember is that there's a big difference between a non-monopoly business practices. If a non-monopoly says "If you don't put our software on all your machines, you can't put it on any, it doesn't matter, because the OEM has choices. When a monopoly does it, it is illegal, because the OEM has no real choice (go out of business?).

    If the schools had actually purchased the software rather than acquired it for free, the deal adds up to a $5.7 billion (yes, billion with a "b") missed opportunity. That's $5.7 billion USD in sales that Sun will never see because they gave it away at a time when they don't need to be giving away $5.7 billion.

    Oh come on, buddy. This is complete nonsense. While the numbers work out, it's meaningless. Software doesn't have intrinsic value. That's not like saying "I'm going to give away 100 cars." It's the same thing about trying to figure out the value of "pirated" software. You can't say you lost 40 millions dollars, because one million people "pirated" your $40 software. It just doesn't work like that. These schools wouldn't have paid $5.7 billion for this software, so SUN didn't give away $5.7 billion.

    Anyways, the editorial just goes on and on like this.. it's truly painful to read.

  87. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by planckscale · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yes, please, will schools PLEASE start purchasing these low cost Windo$e alternatives? Can you imagine the level of computer competence grade schoolers would achieve if there were 10 networked Sun machines in every class? Kids sitting in front of a MS machine, being passively marketed to by MSN, are only going to become even more frustrated by technology. Put a 1.0 ghz Sun/Duron in front of them and watch them learn. "Hey I made a Web Server!" "Look! I built a Firewall!" "Teacher, how do I read a MAN?"

    --
    Namaste
  88. Does Sun have an idea? by Lumpy · · Score: 2

    Has someone told Sun what Low-cost PC means? I mean it. Are they really ready to sell Sun hardware at the $600 - $1100 dollar price point? The last time I checked the cheapest Sun workstation was $2700.00 from them and that was without decent hardware in it.

    I really hope they aren't biting off more than they can shew as nobody is going to buy a $1400-$1900 sun workstation as a "low cost PC"

    but that said... I will pay a premium if it is in fact Sun hardware and not a gigabyte board +intel or AMD+other generic in a regular box with a sun logo stuck on it. I already have a "Silicon graphics workstation" that is like that (Yes I pryed a SGI logo and the name sticker off of the @home hardware that was getting chucked... and yes it's on my dual PIII workstation at home.)

    If it's SUN then gimmie! if it's intel... you can keep it.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    1. Re:Does Sun have an idea? by MagusX · · Score: 1

      Apparently you've never checked out the SunBlade workstations. They sell for around $1000.

    2. Re:Does Sun have an idea? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      ..and run at about 1/4 the speed of the slowest Wintel box you can buy.

      Seriously.

      They still have UltraSparc-IIi in them.

      They are crap. Don't bother.

    3. Re:Does Sun have an idea? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes I have, no monitor or all the assorted prephrials, oh yeah and no OS either... you have to pay extra for solaris.. and what about the CD-R or DVD drive? oh and the Hard drive is extra...

      it adds up REALLY fast, cince you cant put IDE on a sun (Thank GOD!) so you cant use crap-quality consumer stuff but commercial quality SCSI hard drives and CDR or DVD.. increasing the price by $250.00 each item oh and plus another $500.0 for a sun monitor... cuz they cant use standard monitor designs and plugs...

      comparing a blade workstation to a wintel box... blade $1000.... wintel $200.00 for the same level of configuration and hardware.

      dont cut it :-) nice try though.

  89. The missing link in anti MS plans like this by Steve+Franklin · · Score: 1

    These guys need to merge/linkup with peripheral manufacturers to offer X-ready (where X is the name of the alternate computer/OS package) peripherals for the new system. This is the bottleneck right now. The peripheral manufacturers won't supply timely (or at all) drivers for their equipment that works with Linux and other alternate systems. Supply a minimal number of printers/scanners/faxes that work out of the box with their computers. Not that I particularly like HP, but they would be an ideal partner in this.

    Or even better--build one of those all purpose fax/copier/printer/scanner jobs that includes a free computer/OS in the package. The cost for the OS would be negligible, you could build the computer into the box to save on material costs, and have a keyboard/tablet hanging out the front that would double as the control panel.

    --
    Hic iacet Arthurus, rex quondam rexque futurus.
  90. smart card by johnjones · · Score: 2

    as I said above

    its not really all that hard and they get the margins by putting on a smart card reader on it and asking you to buy a BIG SUN server to run your web portal and sign on DB

    which makes sense because you where running you NIS+ on a SUN anyway and now you want to upgrade to liberty (-;

    regards

    John Jones

  91. second best solution effect by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Once again we see the market jumping onto an inferior technical solution. It is up to us to educate people that FreeBSD is a much better operating system then Loosenux, which still doesn't have a stable VM or robust filesystem---basic operating functionality. Linux has set back the state of computing by 10 years wasted on reimplementing what's already in BSD and implementing it badly. We need to get the word out that BSD is the best free operating system in the world.

  92. Beat MS? by shine-shine · · Score: 1
    sun wants to beat MS

    No, Sun wants to be MS.

  93. Right.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "An editorial in the WorldTechTribute argues that Sun's education-market giveaway is exactly the sort of behavior that Microsoft has been attacked for in the past."


    Right, and Sun is dangerously close to monopolizing the market.


    Cheap computers for schools aren't bad--they're nice. The company gets some exposure, and obviously more school kids get computers.


    It's bad when Microsoft does it because it's cementing their monopoly. That doesn't mean that competing as a whole is bad and wrong.

  94. Re:You are absolutely NOT correct by rppp01 · · Score: 1

    Sun is going into a market they have not been in before- that of the desktop. Corporate desktop. They are 'invading' microsoft's space. Microsoft Windows cannot scale to 64+ processors as Sun Solaris can. So, how can Sun be in MS's crosshairs when they are not even in the same part of the market. IBM and Sun fight it out, not MS and Sun.

    --
    They stuck me in an institution, said it was the only solution, to...protect me from the enemy, myself
  95. The question is not who you can buy Solaris from by kfg · · Score: 2

    The question is who can you buy a UNIX operating system from.

    There is not only no monopoly but UNIX systems are available for free from multiple vendors.

    Solaris is a *brand,* not an operating system per se, just as Ford and Chevy are both *cars.* Ford has a monopoly on the *trademark,* not the car.

    KFG

  96. On the way by olympus_coder · · Score: 1

    We already have 4 dual processor (2x1.4gHz) suns running linux on the way. I'm very curious to see how the new sun achitecture compares to a slightly fast dual athlon running linux. Sun is starting to cover the clock speed gap. Will they keep the good architecture or pull an intel and downgrade P4 style? I wonder.

    --
    Spell check? Why bother. That is what grammer/spelling Nazi freaks who waiste band width posting "spell right" are for.
  97. SUNW tanks by lseltzer · · Score: 2

    >>Look at where it has gotten Sun shareholders.

    No kidding. SUNW went under 3 today and their market cap is under $10B for the first time in over 5 years.

    1. Re:SUNW tanks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, the rest of the market is doing A-OK. No problems, except those with SUNW.

      When will all you armchair investment counselors stop talking through your asses? Saying that Sun stock is tanking without admitting greater market forces is absurd. It doesn't, however, fit in neatly into your argument, so I understand why you are ignoring the facts.

  98. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by Bri3D · · Score: 0

    Sun gives light and Apple gives....what? The keys to the education market are inertia, low cost and inertia. Oh, and supporting those 10 year old Performas in the back room running Mac OS 7. The lab at my kid's school has a slew of new PowerBooks and iMacs, all running OS 9, for the foreseeable future. To get them off of OS 9, (or Apple in general) and onto Linux would take a monumental training effort for the teachers, lab techs, and students. Not to mention a budgetary hit in bad budgetary times. My guess is that OS X will never grace the screens of their current crop of computers. The only way Micros**t has wedged their way into some schools is by giving away HW, SW and most importantly, SERVICES and TRAINING to the schools who have vested interest(inertia) in Apple. I doubt Sun really wants into this low margin market. You might say it is good to get kids hooked on your logo, but in the long run it hasn't done all that much for Apple.

  99. I'd buy one.. by Chicane-UK · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Even though I build my own PC's and download Linux, I support what Sun has done. If I was looking to buy a 2nd system to run Linux on I would buy one of these for a number of reasons :

    a) Sun cases look cool.. and trying to find decent looking and inexpensive cases in the UK seems to be fruitless.

    b) The quality of the kit should be pretty good.. I have a Sun Blade 100 and that system is very well built and reliable.

    c) Even though Sun are a big company I still appreciate what they do for individual users - so I'd feel like I was helping a bit to keep them afloat.

    --
    "Hey! Unless this is a nude love-in, get the hell off my property!!"
  100. Dude, you're getting a... Sun?! by kermit6306 · · Score: 1

    Sun won't be competing with Microsoft, they'll be competing with Dell. Ah well, some of us have to learn the hard way I guess..

  101. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by MaxVlast · · Score: 2

    And when it comes time to make a resume, they can host the thing, but they can't get the tabs to align in the document :-)

    --
    There should be a moratorium on the use of the apostrophe.
    Max V.
    NeXTMail/MIME Mail welcome
  102. Sun needs a transition plan by Skapare · · Score: 2

    Sun needs a transition plan to make migration from the low end Linux/x86 based desktops and servers to their Solaris/Sparc based high end workstations and enterprise servers. Otherwise they will not be able to bring as much sales up to the higher tier. There are two ways to do this. One is to run Solaris on x86 hardware as the middle tier. The other is to run Linux on Sparc hardware as the middle tier. One of these approaches leaves Sun subject to the whims of another CPU maker, which has it's own plans for 64-bit domination. The other leaves Sun subject to the whims of a huge open source software community and a few choices in Linux distributions (such as Debian, Mandrake, and SuSE) as well as FreeBSD, NetBSD, and OpenBSD. Which way do you think would be better for Sun?

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  103. NO ITS NOT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft was never attacked for giving compooters to schools. neither was apple.

    Microsoft was attacked for making deals with schools that went hand in hand with getting the compooters.

    MS said hey school, we'll give you some computers, but we want you to teach these microsoft classes and stop teaching these unix/perl classes.

    Anyone can donate to a school, but they should not be influencing what and how the school teaches.

    Shame on MS and the bastard who wrote this article.

  104. poor Sun... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's like watching DEC thrash about years ago.

  105. Scott McNasty's xpensive house-o-clones by gelfling · · Score: 1, Troll

    Gee what a frickin brainstorm. Overengineerd hardware company makes overengineered PCs with 'value added' free OS. Can you imagien the service charges???? I can - they will suck.

  106. Sun vs. WalMart by Animats · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Sun's competition here isn't Microsoft, it's WalMart.

    First, Sun can't make low-end PCs themselves. If Sun makes it, it will cost too much. They have to outsource, in which case, they're a reseller adding cost without value. WalMart can deal with offshore manufacturers directly; they don't need Sun. Sun doesn't have a distribution channel for moving low-end boxes in volume; it probably costs their sales operation a few hundred dollars to sell and deliver anything. Sun isn't known as a consumer brand; they have no retail presence.

    So what does Sun bring to the party? StarOffice?

    1. Re:Sun vs. WalMart by sysadmn · · Score: 2

      Corporate credibility.
      If it costs a thousand dollars to make a sale, you sell 20-50 boxes per sale. For smaller orders, you have channel resellers and offer individuals self-service at the SunStore website.
      Sun is not looking to compete with Walmart or Gateway. They want to displace IBM, H-paq and Dell in schools and corporations.

      --
      Envy my 5 digit Slashdot User ID!
  107. Wednesday? by banky · · Score: 2

    It's 4:10pm EST as I write this.. there's not much Wednesday left. When will we get to see these new machines?

    It's only early afternoon in SF but late afternoon seems weird for a product demo or press release. Apple, for example, seems to always have the keynote in the morning.

    --
    ZOMG I WOULD LOVE TO KNOW ABOUT YOUR FEELINGS ON MACINTOSH VERSUS WINDOWS, VI VERSUS EMACS, AND HOW YOU'RE NOT A DORK
  108. Sun is going for a tax writeoff by filmcritic · · Score: 1

    It's plainly obvious why Sun is trying to throw the odious Star Office to every "student" in the world AND sell Linux machines - they need a big write-off this year. Everyone know that MS Office is THE standard in the business world. Walk into an office and tell them you don't know MS Word or Excel, but you do know Star Office, and you'll be laughed out of the building. Star Office is yet another "me too" product that will never catch on. As for selling Linux boxes, Linux don't sell very well because Linux users don't like to pay for anything. Sun should know that, but they want the tax break.

    1. Re:Sun is going for a tax writeoff by jasonditz · · Score: 1

      I think Sun is looking down the road here.

      Get the kids hooked on Linux/StarOffice and when they are all grown up they'll be more open to it in the business world.

  109. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by NineNine · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Kids should not be learning how to make a web server in school. That's asinine. That's as useless as going to shop class to learn how to weld. Adminstration is a trade, and now a relatively low-end trade at that. Kids shold not be spending what little time they have in school concentrating on any one or two trades. That's ridiculous. Computers should be in schools as tools to help teachers teach, and as an after-school activity for a few young geeklings. That's it.

    And if you want to argue as to usefulness of trades, I'd say that auto work is more useful than administration. Any fucking monkey can start a webserver or turn on a firewall. Not anybody can work on car engines. Besides, which is more useful in real life? Yeah. I thought so.

  110. Here is the business plan: by thomasj · · Score: 2, Funny
    Three easy steps:
    1. Sell Linux PCs at cost price and give away StarOffice
    2. ???
    3. Profit.
    Sorry, couldn't resist. :-P
    --
    :-) = I am happy
    :^) = I am happy with my big nose
    C:\> = I am happy with my OS
    1. Re:Here is the business plan: by Wajsbrem · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think this business plan would be preferable-- This paper outlines a new business strategy for Sun Microsystems Inc. (Sun) that seems to greatly improve upon the company's current one. By adopting this paper's ideas, it seems that Sun can re-orientate itself, in a straightforward manner, to vastly increased profitability - away from its current path to demise. However, the window of opportunity for the strategy's execution is limited due to the growing enterprise functionality and corporate support of the open-source Linux operating system and the growth of the Microsoft .NET software platform.

  111. On the other hand... by greenhide · · Score: 1

    ...they won't be making their latest version of Solaris available to non-Sun platforms.

    There is an article on eWeek that discusses how people are responding to Sun's refusal to release Solaris 9 to non-Sun x86 hardware.

    --
    Karma: Chevy Kavalierma.
  112. Go for it... by Refried+Beans · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I hope this move hurts Sun as much as it hurt SGI.

    1. Re:Go for it... by Tpenta · · Score: 1

      The difference here is that SGI mortgaged their Souls to Redmond to start selling intel hardware. This was a shame because the MIPS based boxes were very nice. When Sun sells an intel based box, there will be no tax to Microsoft attached.

  113. Who is the "World Tech Tribune" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've never heard of it. And in fact, there was a single accurate statement in the whole "article." The site looks like a fake.

  114. Which Distro? by Andrewkov · · Score: 2

    Which Distro will they use? The article doesn't say.

  115. WorldTechTribute by Rupert · · Score: 2

    Wow, that is a scary site. It's like the wet dream of proprietary software salesmen. Anything you don't pay for is *evil*. If you even look at the CD twice you owe us an extra licence fee. Don't like it? 5 years in jail or be fined 3 months salary.

    --

    --
    E_NOSIG
  116. Why not Solaris? by tlambert · · Score: 2

    Why not Solaris? It's not like they'd have to pay royalties to anyone, or anything, or that it would cost them any more. And they could subsidize the Solaris developement by amortizing some of it across the new machines; they're going to have to do that anyway, with the Linux, if they plan on trading on their name that way.

    This doesn't make a lot of sense to me; maybe it's just some tail-tweaking, rather than something that's really going to happen?

    This really feels like a big mistake. Remember when BMD came out with a low end car, and no one bought it because BMW meant "upscale", but the mere existance of the lowscale offering damaged their brand image?

    -- Terry

    1. Re:Why not Solaris? by Tpenta · · Score: 1

      Sun has committed to Solaris on the LX50 platform.

      We're all waiting with baited breath to hear of any other platforms it might be supported on. It would make sense to do a similar qualification for any other intel hardware that they sold.

      From what I read, Sun is doing Linux because customers have been constantly asking them to do it.

  117. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by Cirvam · · Score: 1

    Its easy as hell to work on an engine, and hell if you want to do it right you could even get the chiltons manual for the car and just follow the step by step instructions with pictures. It could be said for just about any trade where the result isn't something that has to be functional and pretty at the same time.

  118. Solaris x86 by MoonRider · · Score: 1

    At least they're not going to abandon solaris x86... I just don't understand why Sun prefered Linux...
    They could develop drivers for all the devices of the PCs they're going to sell. Since solaris x86 is free, the cost would be the same.

  119. Sun considered harmful by bogon.23 · · Score: 1

    I'm working at a small software development company that also delivers on Solaris. It is so complicated to get Sun hardware or to get updates for compilers. It's just a hell of bureaucracy. I thought these guys should be interested in providing us with newest compilers and stuff to make us happy. But they are just arrogant. So drop Sun, use Linux!

  120. Monopoly? by Smidge204 · · Score: 1

    I work for an engineering office that handles a lot of construction work in my school district. You learn a lot in this business.

    In the great rush to get schools "into the 21st century", every school (8 elementary, 2 middle and 1 high school) has *at least* one computer lab, and an average of 4 computers *per room* in all but the High school (only 1 station per room there). From Kindergarten to 9th grade, these kids are never more than 20 feet from a CRT.

    Each and every computer is running Win98 with a full install of MS Office Pro (Word, Powerpoint, Excel, Access, Publisher, etc). Even the kindergarten computers. Why? To 5 year olds really need to make databases and spreadsheets? (Not that doubt they could, of course...)

    The school district pays Microsoft approximately $11,000 per year for software licenses. That's cheap, because they get a huge discount for having everythig installed on *every* computer.

    So of course, StarOffice was mentioned as a cheaper alternative. While the software cost would be much lower for licenses, apparently it would cost the district *more* to have had StarOffice installed instead of Microsoft's suite.

    I couldn't get that number, but I did learn that the district spent $60,000 re-training the teachers and staff when they upgradeed their systems from *Win95*.

    If it cost 60 grand to train these morons to use 98 instead of 95, I can't begin to imagine the cost of converting MSOffice to StarOffice.

    Yeah, Microsoft's not a monopoly... they're drug dealers. I'm also glad I don't plan to have any kids.

    The only way around this problem would be to not use Windows from the start. At least in a totally new environment it should be easier to train the staff; less confusing if for no other reason. More power to Sun Microsystems, I say.

    Another user commented: "The people who should buy from Sun are (and i quote) markets such as corporate call centers, government and schools. These are the sort of folks who don't have a clue how to run their PC's. More importantly, they don't want to have a clue how to run them either."

    You couldn't be more right.
    =Smidge=

    1. Re: Monopoly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think monopolies *are* illegal. Doing certain things to protect and perpetuate them, though, that *can* be illegal.

  121. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by planckscale · · Score: 1

    I agree with you cirriculm ideas and you're right. But if some teacher is going to purchase educational software as an "Aid", then why purchase the OS-platform that it runs on. And for people who say "it would take too much training for school teachers and administrators, I'd say "So what, tax payers are paying your ass." Learn how to install a Red Hat distro by booting from the CD. Or even worse, learn how to clone a clean hard drive. Isn't Open Office a word processor with spell check also? Why wouldn't you spend $300 for Office XP? You're fogetting that most car engines nowadays don't need their carburetors rebuilt or their valves adjusted. It's all done by Computers. So the next time a kid builds his own web interface that plugs into your car and fixes your knocking, who's the f***ing monkey?

    --
    Namaste
  122. Re: Sun offering support and warranties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not for a price you'd accept. List priced Sun support on even a midrange (by Sun standards) can cost you much more in two to three years than the box itself. You probably don't want to use the same support network for supporting mass-market (~PC) problems. The margin on PC support is orders of magnitude less.

  123. Ugly history of the expression by Dr.+Spork · · Score: 2
    Actually, the history of the expression, as I understand it, is quite sinister. It goes back to the days of US slavery, when a "red-headed stepchild" was the offspring produced by the pairing of a married white woman and a slave. The angry husbands typically made slaves of these stepchildren, and in any case, did not treat them well. I understand it was common that at some point in their childhood, their hair would have a reddish tint, explaining the expression.

    Anyway, this is not a nice or cute expression, and though you may think yourself clever for using it, it leaves a bad taste in my mouth.

  124. And no $500 tax deduction per giveaway by Rob+Y. · · Score: 1

    I believe they're actually making StarOffice free for educational use.

    Contrast that to Microsoft which makes a 'donation' at list price and writes it off on their taxes, for a net gain.

    Even if Sun is going the 'donation' route, the list price is only $70, so the exploit's not so nasty.

    --
    Posted from my Android phone. Oh, I can change this? There, that's better...
  125. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by NineNine · · Score: 1

    Teachers are paid on salary. They are already overworked, underpaid, and underappreciated. Asking one of these teachers to fight with a relatively obscure OS, and find non-existant software to say, help to teach her kids chemistry is fucking ridiculous. Computers are cute and all, but next time you get in a car, remember that the whole thing was deisgned by engineers (not IT grunts), the whole thing was manufactured by manufacturing experts, and the whole process was brought together by businesspeople. Computer people are just grunts, like like any other blue-collar profession. True, it needs to be done, but to teach it in school is completely arbitrary. I can get by without a computer. I can't get by without plumbing and electricity. Why not teach kids plumbing in schools? All kids aren't gonna be plumbers, that's why.

  126. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by NineNine · · Score: 1

    Its easy as hell to work on a computer, and hell if you want to do it right you could even get the WROX manual for the program and just follow the step by step instructions with pictures.

  127. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by krasni_bor · · Score: 1
    Teachers are paid on salary. They are already overworked, underpaid, and underappreciated. Asking one of these teachers to fight with a relatively obscure OS, and find non-existant software to say, help to teach her kids chemistry is fucking ridiculous.
    As a teacher and technology coordinator in an urban public high school, it is clear to me that classroom teachers shouldn't be asked to administer computers running any operating system. They should have terminals in their rooms which are administered from a handful of centralized servers (a la ltsp).

    It is the only approach that makes any sense.

  128. CORRECTION: Linux is a *HIGH END* complement.. by borgheron · · Score: 1

    to Solaris. I have worked extensively with both and personal experience has shown me that Linux is a much better OS.

    Sun is kidding themselves into thinking that Solaris is better and trying to brainwash the masses into thinking it too w/ their very public very sensational announcement.

    GJC

    Corporate games...

    --
    Gregory Casamento
    ## Chief Maintainer for GNUstep
  129. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by Corporate+Troll · · Score: 1
    Isn't that what CSS is for? I mean, if you get a server up and running, learning basic HTML and CSS1 should be peanuts.

    And since the headhunters will be running IE6 they will be able to read it. Well, if IE6 complies to standards and everyone here claims so. I use Mozilla anyway, on x86 and Mac.

  130. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by planckscale · · Score: 1

    Hey, there you go. Perfect! Exactly, why buy a Windows 2000 server for $3000, not including the Citrix software itself, along with the per seat licenses, when there are open source solutions? Teachers shouldn't be PC administrators I agree, but they also shouldn't be forced into huge budget cuts into their salary because of licensing fees.

    --
    Namaste
  131. Little Blue Cubes by ckrause · · Score: 1

    Cheap Linux PCs. What an origional idea! Maybe they can use little cubes for cases and paint them Cobalt blue. rightHand, I would like to introduce you to leftHand.

  132. monopoly by tswinzig · · Score: 2

    Giving away software does not make you a monopoly. Immoral business practices do.

    Wrong. Monopolies are fine and dandy. Perfectly legal. The goal of every public business is to become a monopoly.

    However once you are a monopoly, you have to play by a different set of rules, or the government will step in like they are with Microsoft.

    --

    "And like that ... he's gone."
    1. Re:monopoly by XaXXon · · Score: 2

      Wrong. Monopolies are fine and dandy. Perfectly legal. The goal of every public business is to become a monopoly.

      whoa.. I don't think I said monopolies were illegal. I surely didn't mean to. If they were, and you were the first to start doing something, you'd have to artificially start competition in order to not be a monopoly.

      I did, however, state that immoral business practices tend to lead to monopolies. You can be "better" at business if you don't let bothersome things like ethics and morals get in your way. If you do, someone else won't, and you'll be eaten alive.

      However once you are a monopoly, you have to play by a different set of rules, or the government will step in like they are with Microsoft.

      While this is true, it's sort of an interesting part of our government system.. by the time you get big enough for these laws to apply to you, you're at a point where you control a lot of the people who are supposed to be curtailing your activities. I don't know how much money MS has spent buying people so MS won't get split up or whatever, but I'm sure it's immense. Not that the law is bad, but it's really tough to enforce.

      This may not be the time or place for this, but I believe there should be VERY harsh laws for bribery in politics -- from lengthy prison terms to the death penalty depending on the severity of the infraction. If I take money from chemical company X and then vote to make their chemical legal, even though I know it's going to seep into the water and give people cancer, I deserve to die. People should get into politics because they want to help others, not themselves. But now I'm going a bit off topic. Sorry.

  133. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    Lots... they're behind the cameras, calling the shots, and earning the real money.

  134. dyslexic but since he cant spell... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    dyslexic but since he cant spell...

  135. Politics by Jungle+guy · · Score: 1

    McNealy is getting too political in his diatribes against Microsoft. I feel he is not pushing for the Linux PC to help diversity in the OS market or even for the good of his own company, but simply to hurt Microsoft. The desktop PC market is in a standstill, with very thin profit margins. The merged HP is not going very well. I bet Sun won't make much money with this product, and a management change could cancel it. Microsoft will brag as a "proof" that Linux is not profitable and hurts business.

  136. He Is from Sudan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Julian Bashir is from Sudan, probably of Arabic ancestry (I am not sure). He looks and acts very European, though; I presume he grew up in England

  137. Ok, Listen by G00F · · Score: 2

    MS has a tendence to take over a market, and spread to any adjacent markets. That is the only reason why people have IE, MS Office, NT Servers, etc.

    By preventing MS from getting more, SUN is staying alive. MS has been for years trying to take over SUN (Server) market. Look what happened to Novel. (well novel had 2 problems, 1 being tcp/ip and the other being MS) But MS has a monopoly (desktop, etc) and is pushing it into the server. SUN is trying to make it so they are needed as servers, not ms as everything. MS brakes openGL, java, html, javascript, everything they touch. They don't touch things they don't plan on taking over and turning it into another monopoly, or to streathen a monopoly.

    What SUN should be doing, is working closely with a few linux distros, to get it to work great as a client to its servers. And to get it to run java perfectly, and fast. SUN doesn't need to sell Linux to beat back MS, but they think they can make money using linux, when all they need to do is make it stronger as a client.

    --
    The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive
  138. MS is a Monopoly--Sun is not. by buffy · · Score: 5, Insightful
    An editorial in the WorldTechTribute argues that Sun's education-market giveaway is exactly the sort of behavior that Microsoft has been attacked for in the past.

    Perhaps the difference, however, is that Microsoft is a judicially declared Monopoly, whereas Sun is not. So, the anti-competitive..nay...competitive behaviour of Sun is NOT on par with the same behaviour of Microsoft. This fact is one of the big reasons Microsoft fought such a declaration so hard--they kept saying, to the effect, "we're just competing in the marketplace."

    From a certain perspective this actually may seem unfair to Microsoft, but remember that the determination that MS was a monopoly was based, in no small part, due to the illegal activities that they were engaged in to obtain/maintain an unfair market advantave. So, punitive actions are certainly justified to try to bring it back into line and even the competitive landscape--to give other companies such as Sun the opportunity to succeed that they were previously denied by Microsoft's behaviour.

    Just my $0.02.

  139. nyeh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sooo now suns on the lame bandwagon to. Oh boy.

  140. Stanford has 17 living Nobel Prize winners by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0



    http://www.stanford.edu/dept/news/report/news/oc to ber3/nobelcoverage-103.html

  141. Re:Why Sun? Sun gives light... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And what educational software (not learning to be sysadmin folks, I'm talking about the kind to teach kids math, how to read, chemistry, etc) is there on Linux? (real question... I don't know of any and would like to know)

  142. Re:die Sonne by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Mien Cempf" better still. ;)

  143. Sun ALREADY sells Linux PC's by blakespot · · Score: 2

    They're call Cobalt's.

    blakespot

    --
    -- Heisenberg may have slept here.
    iPod Hacks.com
  144. petition for Sun by Wajsbrem · · Score: 1

    Sun Microsystems Inc. should leave the production of low-end 'Lintel' machines to Acer, HP, and other Taiwanese clone makers who are more experienced in this segment and have stronger relationships with low-end Intel customers. In fact, I believe Sun could more effectively leverage their intellectual property by adapting their Solaris/SPARC[tm] platform for the low end - and then hamper Linux completely. A petition is available to sign on this matter: petition for Sun, which refers to the website scottmcnealy.com !

  145. Re:die Sonne by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    RUBBISH

  146. I am skeptical by Billly+Gates · · Score: 2

    First off who are they going to sell these to?

    Educators and bussinesses already have contracts with Dell or HP. Also they want to lower support costs by standardizing on a single hardware platform that runs on a standard set of software applications. I do not think any IT manager would like some foreign sun's mixed with HP's for support reasons. Another reason is to just look at SGI's attempt to enter the linux/NT market a few years ago. It failed. As a CIO would you risk your job and hundreds of million's of dollars on supporting a platform that could turn into a in today and out tommorow platform? I don't think so. Infact many CIO's who standardized on NT did so because they were afraid Unix would dead by now. Silly as it may sound, this was common in 96 and 97 when NT 4 came out. Just read any IT magazines from the time. They all had articles like why buy a cad workstations from SGI when you have all these fast pentiums running Windows! Or "Unix vs NT" in the cover. Sadly this started the MCSE craze.

    My prediction is that it will fail misserable due to all the things I mentioned above. The desktop war is over and already won. Rob Young was right on why redhat should stay away from the desktop. Sun needs to find more ways to milk what they currently have. They need to cut some R&D work in java or stop giving away the sdk's and start charging for them. For bussiness (not ethical) reasons they need to stop funding java and giving it away. They do make money by having platform providers sign deals with them to have java ported to there computers but its not profitable enough. Sun is seriously in danger of going under in 2 or 3 years! $2 a share! These pc's wont save them. I know they tried to get into the thin client and appliance markets but failed at that. Poor sun.

  147. lunix == chapter 7 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sun sell lunix systems? Look what happened to SGI. The open sores bandwagon is heading off a financial cliff

  148. Time to come out (anonymously) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Unfortunately, Microsoft, due to undocumented API's, are able to do things with their software that ordinary windows developers like myself cannot. For example, if I were to write a spreadsheet application, chances are it would not perform as well as Excel in simple matters such as SCROLLING the window.

    OK. I'm a former MS NT Developer. (By that I mean, I worked in Redmond, building 26, writing Windows NT). I've been reading Slasdot for a long time, and I've finally had enough of this 'undocumented API' crap.

    When I got to MS you know what documentation they gave me to learn/reference Win API's? MSDN. That's right, the same exact MSDN everyone else in the world looks at.

    Sure, there are some API's that aren't published (I wrote some of them). But that's how all software works, you have public stuff and private stuff, we all know this right? All software does this right? RIGHT?

    Microsoft *does* want developera to succeed at developing windows apps. Don't you get that?

    Now the flipside. Yes, we did some evil shit to make competitors software work worse. No mistake. It scares me to think back to a meeting we had one day about torpeedoing Netscape.

    But that is targeting a specific strategic competitor, and it had NOTHING TO DO WITH HIDING API's

    Yes, MS is evil, or 3v1l or whatever. OK fine. But I'm sick of all this "they hiding API's from us" crap.

    -sig changed to protect the innocent.

    1. Re:Time to come out (anonymously) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      OK. I'm a former MS NT Developer. (By that I mean, I worked in Redmond, building 26, writing Windows NT). I've been reading Slasdot for a long time, and I've finally had enough of this 'undocumented API' crap.

      When I got to MS you know what documentation they gave me to learn/reference Win API's? MSDN. That's right, the same exact MSDN everyone else in the world looks at.

      Sure, there are some API's that aren't published (I wrote some of them). But that's how all software works, you have public stuff and private stuff, we all know this right? All software does this right? RIGHT?


      Yes but surely having an understanding of the "private stuff" and how the APIs themselves are implemented still gives Microsoft developers a distinct advantage over third party developers no matter how you look at it.

      Think about it, how is a third party developer supposed to equal something like oh I don't know IE for example which by Microsoft's admission is integrated deeply into the operating system? Thats what people are talking about when they are referring to hidden APIs.
  149. Sun in schools by grahamsz · · Score: 2

    I know a primary school which has a lab with I think 12 sunrays running off a master server.

    From what I've heard it works great and kids just dont have any trouble with new technology.

    Surely it's best to give kids the most diverse start possible. I hope that I'll be able to speak a second language fluently to help my children learn that, and I fully intend to have a mix of computers in the house to give them a good grounding.

    I grew up with MacOS and Dos and understand both of them pretty damn well.

  150. McNealy going into the liquidation biz? by Strudelkugel · · Score: 1

    Let's think about this for a sec...
    • Sun introduces a new technology (Java) for free.
    • Sun offers StarOffice for free to schools.
    • Sun offers PCs running Linux. (Not much profit here!)

    This is all great unless:

    • You own SUNW
    • You own Sun debt
    • You work for Sun

    Must be McNealy's scorched earth policy. How long until SUNW is delisted and the biz reviews start flowing? Sad to say, I think this company is going the way of Cray Research.
    --
    Imagine how much harder physics would be if electrons had feelings! -Feynman, maybe
  151. Yeah but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sun is also a computer vendor and software, Microsoft does not sell computers, just software ... keep Apples and Apples, Timothy.

  152. What's so surprising? by jsse · · Score: 2

    Sun has always been donating their Sun Sparc workstations to Universities(full labs of them here), why is it a big deal when they decided to donate cheaper things? :)

    Their stock price should drop in response to their cheapy decision. j/k

  153. Microsoft Getting Out of Legal Damages, Sun is Not by MikeJ9919 · · Score: 1

    The article makes some decent points, but while I questioned Microsoft's motives, I never really had a problem with them giving away free stuff to schools, even if it did mean people were "embracing the Microsoft future." But what really pissed me off was Microsoft trying (and succeeding? I can't remember the resolution of the case.) to push "donations" of software and hardware as reparation for a civil suit they lost in a court of law. I don't think Microsoft should be able to backdoor their way out of legal damages by throwing in some token hardware, and then just picking whatever price they want for the software, to make up the difference. Until Sun starts doing that, I say good for them that they're helping schools.

    -Mike-

  154. Microsoft sucks. by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 1

    I sincerely hope that in the next two to three years, Microsoft will lose an enormous amount of market share in its operating system ventures, as well as the respect of nearly all users. In addition, I hope they're forced to release Linux versions of all their major applications, with government-mandated fully documented file formats. And I hope nobody buys those defective programs anyway.

  155. Re:I am skeptical [I'm not] by Tpenta · · Score: 1

    Who is to say that these will only be sold into markets which have lots of DELL of HP? There are a lot of companies out there that run a lot of Sun hardware at the high end. Implementing Sun Linux at the lower end for these companies makes a lot of sense. For starters you get rid of the finger pointing involved when something goes wrong or doesn't interoperate properly, as you are looking at a single vendor who has committed to getting it right. The liklihood of the kit actually interoperating properly is also substantially raised.

    Sun is also doing a lot more than just the PCs and Linux. That's just what's making the headlines at the moment. As an example, just this morning I saw an ad for one of the new Nokia phones. The advertorial made a big thing about it being java enabled. Licensing Java engines into phones is certainly one way to make some money. You've also got N1 on the horizon.

    I own shares in Sun, I'm not selling, in fact I'm buying.

  156. WorldTechReview is owned... by samdu · · Score: 1

    ...by the Washington Times which is located in - duh - Washington. A rather large closed-source OS vendor is also located in Washington. Coincidence? Perhaps. I believe I will investigate this further.

  157. The devil is in the details by hey! · · Score: 3

    Especially with software, which is not donated, but licensed. You are not free to do as you wish; the restrictions you agree to have an economic value -- they may in fact put you in the practical position of surrendering cash in the future.

    When donating GPL'd software (Linux), or software which is based on well documented and open file formats (StarOffice) that can be read by GPL'd software (OpenOffice), you are making a donation which has no strings attached. It's a very different thing.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  158. lpr .... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Configure your default printer with your favourtie shell, or using your printcap or whatever you are using for printing configuration, then lpr should be enough to print anything....

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  159. MS licensing is very onerous. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Anything that works in a similar fashion that does not have the same licensing nightmares is an imrpovement.

    For starters nobody can come, knock in your door and try a MS sponsored software audit: "Linux shope here pal, StarOffice site license as well, so move on and extortionate other companies..."

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  160. Re:Actually... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just to point out the obvious, DS9 is not Star Trek.