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Sun Plans To Make Java Enterprise System Open Source

Sun announced Monday that it has distributed more than a million registered licenses for the Solaris 10 operating system since Jan. 31, when the software became available for free on Sun's Web site. Now it plans to follow up that move by making Java Enterprise System available as an open-source product as well. "That will define us as a company truly committed to open source," Jonathan Schwartz, president and chief operating officer of Sun, told InformationWeek.

The company aims to cement itself as a long-term industry-cornerstone provider of operating-system software, increasing its overall position in mainstream computing environments. Schwartz sees an "epic battle" ahead among Microsoft, Sun, and Red Hat. "Going forward, the dominate operating systems will be Microsoft Windows, Sun Solaris, and Red Hat Linux," Schwartz says. "Those are certainly the two targets we're focused on."

Sun is being cagey about the exact timing of when it might make Java Enterprise System available as open source. Schwartz said if Sun were to make such an announcement, it would come in the second quarter. But he went on to leave little doubt that the open-source approach is Sun's game plan for gaining a distinct advantage over its middleware competition. The pending release of Java Enterprise System "will define Sun as the only company that is truly committed to open source as a means of driving innovation and adoption. I think it will put an awful lot of pressure on proprietary companies like IBM with WebSphere, Tivoli, and Lotus, not a single one of which is open source," Schwartz says.

The growing use of Solaris as an open-source operating system is the biggest cultural shift for Sun since the company three years ago moved to become a "cross-platform" provider of systems based on both its traditional SPRAC processors, and x86 processors, he says. The open-source Solaris is now allowing the company to extend its footprint again, this time into non-Sun hardware. Of the million Solaris open-source licenses, Sun believes two-thirds were downloaded for use on non-Sun equipment.

The cumulative effect "has been a pretty significant departure for a company that had the reputation of being proprietary and expensive," he says.

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