Slashdot Mirror


The Comedy of Scott McNealy

Rob writes "News that Sun co-founder and long-serving CEO, Scott McNealy is stepping aside, heaps a load of pressure on incoming CEO Jonathan Schwartz - he will have to get working on his anti-Microsoft gags quick-sharp. Aside from Sun's strategy and his execution of it, McNealy's tenure as CEO will be remembered for his constant Microsoft sniping. CBR remembers some of his favourite quotes."

15 of 125 comments (clear)

  1. The Quotes by neonprimetime · · Score: 5, Funny

    A selection of the best Scott McNealy quotes: "When Steve Ballmer calls me wacko, I consider that a compliment." "The only thing that I'd rather own than Windows is English, because then I could charge you two hundred and forty-nine dollars for the right to speak it." "Shut down some of the bullshit the government is spending money on and use it to buy all the Microsoft stock. Then put all their intellectual property in the public domain. Free Windows for everyone! Then we could just bronze Gates, turn him into a statue and stick him in front of the Commerce Department." "Microsoft is now talking about the digital nervous system... I guess I would be nervous if my system was built on their technology too." "It's the good guys versus the bad guys, and the good guys are winning." "W2K (Windows 2000) will be a bigger disaster than Y2K." "A giant hairball." [About Windows NT] "The Evil Empire." [guess who] "The beast from Redmond." [yup] "Anyone heard any good monopolist jokes lately?" "Ballmer and Butthead" [Ballmer and you-know-who] ".Not, .Not Yet and .Nut" [Microsoft's .Net strategy]

    1. Re:The Quotes by dlawson · · Score: 5, Funny

      Best quote from Scott.

            I was a sales support engineer for a pretty big distributor. When they decided to get into Unix, we got a relationship with Sun to sell the Sun Connect line (mostly into the Fed.)

            Scott's best comment came out when MS got ready to ship Win 3.11 -
                  "Putting Windows on top of DOS is like putting whipped cream on a road apple." ... (road apples are horse poop, in case you didn't get the connection.)

      For years my .sig was "Scott McNealy was right."

      davel

      --
      dot-sig.
  2. So, now that he's gone... by Penguinisto · · Score: 4, Interesting
    ...what will happen to OpenOffice and, oh, Java?

    While I suspect that Sun will likely make everything run as usual for at least a little while, at least we knew that with Management's full attention on calling Microsoft bad names, it at least insured that they wouldn't get any bright ideas ab't increasing sagging revenue by screwing with Java and/or all versions of OO.

    /P

    --
    Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    1. Re:So, now that he's gone... by oscartheduck · · Score: 4, Interesting

      A high up Sun representative was interviewed on LugRadio a few months back (I'm pretty sure it's this episode but I'm not one hundred percent certain) in which he categorically stated that everything Sun owns software-wise will be open sourced eventually, including Java.

      --
      How to use coral cache: http://slashdot.org.nyud.net:8090/~oscartheduck
  3. /.'ed. Text of article is . . . by mmell · · Score: 3, Informative
    CBR Editor's Weblog

    Schwartz replaces McNealy: A tough comedy act to follow?

    April 25, 2006

    News that Sun co-founder and long-serving CEO, Scott McNealy is stepping aside, heaps a load of pressure on incoming CEO Jonathan Schwartz - he will have to get working on his anti-Microsoft gags quick-sharp.

    Aside from Sun's strategy and his execution of it, McNealy's tenure as CEO will be remembered for his constant Microsoft sniping. Anyone who saw him speak knows he always had a quiver of anti-Microsoft jokes up his sleeve. "I don't want my kids growing up in a world of control-alt-delete," was one of my favourites, or, "The bear is pretty strong in the computer business ... but we are outrunning the other hikers."

    As we reported in our full coverage of McNealy's decision to hand over to Schwartz here, McNealy said that, "When you start a company, you always wonder who you are going to hand it off to. You can't run it forever."

    "I wasn't going to hand it off when we were growing too fast," he continued, "I wasn't going to hand if off after the bubble burst. The time is right to do it now. All the demand indicators are strong. For 22 years, I have been running this joint, and I have had a lot of fun with it." He certainly has.

    McNealy has been a constant source of amusement in what might otherwise have been a far less interesting sector. He, and Oracle CEO Larry Ellison, have taken it upon themselves to poke constant fun at Microsoft, and in so doing have helped in their own ways to ensure that consumers have retained that little bit of cynicism about the world's most powerful software company.

    In his capacity as CEO McNealy was bright, witty, straight talking, and often with us hacks, more than a little belligerent. Perhaps that's unsurprising - McNealy once said in an interview with CBR that if he had not ended up running an IT company, he would have chosen instead to pass his time thwacking pucks and heads on an ice rink instead. I hear ice hockey is something of a contact sport. At times McNealy got pretty close to turning being a tech firm CEO into a contact sport, too.

    I remember one press roundtable in London a couple of years ago, where a journalist from the Financial Times found himself on the wrong end of McNealy's ire. When the journalist asked a question about comments that Sun's channel had made to him about the soundness of Sun's business model, McNealy retorted sharply: "I'm not going to comment on made-up quotes."

    Though the journalist insisted the quotes came straight from Sun's own resellers, McNealy snapped, "Like I say, I will not comment on made-up quotes." As us press began to leave the room McNealy again accosted the FT journalist, saying he was furious with his paper's editor for stories that had apparently said that McNealy's remuneration had been the cause of a board-room argument. "We haven't even discussed that - it's just been made up," McNealy said furiously.

    Anyway like I say if you want the low-down on McNealy's departure and his replacement, Jonathan Schwartz, simply visit our coverage of the news here. I chose instead to assemble a few of the best Scott McNealy quotes from over the years. I warn you though - he could never have given up his day job to become a comedian. Ice hockey, perhaps.

    A selection of the best Scott McNealy quotes:

    "When Steve Ballmer calls me wacko, I consider that a compliment."

    "The only thing that I'd rather own than Windows is English, because then I could charge you two hundred and forty-nine dollars for the right to speak it."

    "Shut down some of the bullshit the government is spending money on and use it to buy all the Microsoft stock. Then put all their intellectual property in the public domain. Free Windows for everyone! Then we could just bronze Gates, turn him into a statue and stick him in front of the Commerce Department."

    "Microsoft is now talking about the digital nervous system... I guess I would be nervous if my system

  4. Interview at The Register by ChrisRijk · · Score: 4, Informative

    Or, if you'd like some freshly minted Scott:
    http://www.theregister.co.uk/2006/04/25/mcnealy_ex it_interview/

    Among other things, he talks about how he tried to avoid being CEO of Sun in the first place. His first attempt at a replacement (Ed Zander) failed too.

  5. It worked against him, not for him. by hhr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While the constant MS bashing was interesting, I think it worked against Sun, and not for it. It sent the message "Buy Sun if you hate Microsoft." Like it or not, hating MSFT isn't a great way to run a billion dollar business.

    Do I get more rich and more happy just because I hate MSFT? No. I get more rich and more happy by making better choices that ingore (or include) MSFT as warrented.

    Red Hat gets this. McNealy should have sent the message "Buy Sun to solve problems X and Y and Z. That will put more money in your pocket and make you happier." Unless the Schwartz gets this, Sun will continue it's relative decline.

    1. Re:It worked against him, not for him. by menace3society · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While it probably didn't help his case much, I don't it hurt him as much as you suggest. After all, people in charge of plenty of tech companies say bad things about or make fun of their competition (Steve Jobs, Michael Dell, Steve Ballmer). I think the real problem is that this seemed to be Sun's business strategy for the last 8 years or so. Instead of working on ways to make Java a better platform for users (instead of developers), it languished. The much-ballyhooed Java Desktop System hasn't materialized into anything special, and right now it looks like Looking Glass is ending up the same way. Until they released the Niagara, they were falling way behind in the computational power race. And unlike other computer manufacturers, they haven't branched out in any tangible way to supplement their revenue streams (like hp and Dell do with printers, cameras, etc). I guess they haven't had any real solutions to X, Y, or Z that couldn't be duplicated on cheaper hardware with a different OS.

  6. May the Schwartz be with them ... by taniwha · · Score: 4, Funny

    Sun that is ... there someone had to say it, sorry

  7. Scott McNealy is a White Dwarf by digitaldc · · Score: 4, Funny

    Scott McNealy is a White Dwarf.

    --Why did you say that?

    Because he was totally burnt out at SUN.

    --You cannot B-Sirius!

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  8. No Future in Java and Sun's Technology by MOBE2001 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    it at least insured that they wouldn't get any bright ideas ab't increasing sagging revenue by screwing with Java and/or all versions of OO.

    There is no money in Java and not much future in Sun's other technologies. I posted this elseswere yesterday but it bears repeating. My advice to Schwartz is the following. Don't try to beat either Linux or Microsoft at their games. You will lose. I suggest instead that you do something that will take the rest of the industry completely by surprise. Invest your remaining resources and passion into the next big thing, the one thing that will solve the nastiest problem in the computer industry today: unreliability. Put all your money in non-algorithmic, signal-based, synchronous software. It will revolutionize both the hardware and the software industry and usher in the most dramatic change in computing since the days of Charles Babbage and Lady Lovelace. Don't say you weren't warned. ahahaha...

    Why Software Is Bad and What We Can Do to Fix It:

    1. Re:No Future in Java and Sun's Technology by sfjoe · · Score: 3, Insightful



      Your points are valid and would carry a lot more weight if you didn't start out with a stupendously dumb statement like, "There is no money in Java".

      --
      It's simple: I demand prosecution for torture.
  9. Re:Real Comedy: Sun's Joke of a Processor by moro_666 · · Score: 4, Informative

    boy are you lucky that i don't have modpoints on my hands right now.

    1ghz ultrasparc III is rather fast and didn't get beaten by amd or intel by a mile when it came out. it's pretty close, and for it's platform design along with the cpu, it's pretty ok.

    secondly, if you run 128 threads at the same time, amd and intel will be d.e.a.d. while niagara still kicks around. amd's or intel's dual cores on this will still mean 64 context switches per core while for niagara it would be 4 context switches per core.

    smart money votes for the cpu that does the job. if you have a machine that has to handle lots and lots of stuff at the same time, niagara will win while intel and amd are still switching contexts.

    ps. you seem to be forgetting about the fact that the memory limitation on regular x86_64's that you can "just buy" is still enormously low compared to the regular sun workstations.

    you can't throw your lowmemory applications at the systems and say that damn ultrasparc is slow and x86 is fast, if you run linux on x86_64 with highram enabled, it aint that fast either anymore.

    --

    I'd tell you the chances of this story being a dupe, but you wouldn't like it.
  10. Speaking of bad priorities... by Valdrax · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why exactly are we fondly remembering this guy? Everyone seems to be forgetting that one of his more notorious quotes was, "Privacy is dead; get over it." Rather than try to fix privacy problems, McNealy argued that we should just accept it, move on, and embrace the new privacy-less future (especially if it involves systems powered by Sun hardware).

    Don't forget that in the wake of September 11th, both him and Ellison were ponying up to offer their company's services in helping to create a national ID. He even calls lining up at airport security an "efficiency tax" that biometric IDs would somehow maaaaagically fix.

    I say good riddance.

    --
    If it's for-profit but free, you're not the customer -- you're the product (e.g., the Slashdot Beta's "audience").
  11. His funniest quote by QuantGuy · · Score: 4, Funny

    McNealy's funniest quote is probably the following one from a 1996 Red Herring article. His letter to the editor is even funnier.

    NORTHWEST PASSAGE: Microsoft's plans to navigate the Java waters. August 1, 1996

    "Microsoft is on the offensive again because its hegemony is threatened by Java's potential to obsolete Windows and Microsoft Office. This is not only financially threatening, but seen as a personal insult. Sun CEO Scott McNealy ceaselessly goads developers to adopt Java and overthrow what he bluntly calls Redmond's mediocre standards of quality--'Windows 95 is just dogshit with whipped cream on top.'"

    LETTER TO THE EDITOR. December 1, 1996

    McNealy euphemizes

    I enjoyed Jonathan Burke's article "Northwest Passage." Mr. Burke did a fine job of laying out the reasons that software developers are pushing for a multiplatform Internet and how this poses a threat to Microsoft.

    However, I was shocked, puzzled, and offended when I came to a passage in the story that seriously misquoted me referring to Windows 95 as "[expletive] with whipped cream on top." As chairman and CEO of Sun Microsystems, a $7 billion publicly held company, I am very aware that my shareholders and the public take a dim view of crude, unprofessional language from executives. I make it a rule never to curse in public. I don't do it. I would never do it. I didn't do it with Mr. Burke or anyone else. In fact, in a carefully worded and deliberately inoffensive manner, I called Win 95 "whipped cream on a road apple."

    Scott G. McNealy
    President and CEO
    Sun Microsystems

    The Herring Responds

    Ah, "a road apple"--that's much more genteel.