By
Martin Lamonica
Thursday, December 02 2004 11:31 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39203457,00.htm
Taking an intentionally cautious tone, Microsoft and Sun Microsystems
executives said Wednesday that the first eight months of their 10-year
partnership have yielded small, but significant progress.
The two companies held a press briefing to detail the areas of technical collaboration called for in a far-reaching, and closely watched, agreement.
They indicated that the two industry heavyweights--once vocal critics
of each other--have established a constructive working relationship.
"As a relationship goes, this is a 180 degree U turn," said Greg
Papadopoulos, Sun's chief technology officer, who has met a number of
times with Microsoft Chief Software Architect Bill Gates. "Nine months
ago, we were slashing each others' tires. Now we're helping each other
fix each other's flats."
In April of this year, Microsoft and Sun announced a surprise
agreement that called for a settlement of ongoing litigation; a
commitment to refrain from suing each other on the basis of patents;
and a technical collaboration to make their products interoperate. The
deal resulted in payment of US$1.95 billion to Sun.
Since then, there have been 15 meetings between top executives at both
companies, and engineers meet on a monthly basis. Gates and
Papadopoulos have also held meetings with common customers in order to
guide their priorities.
As indicated earlier,
the two companies said that the areas of technical collaboration
involve making their respective network authentication systems work
better together and that they intend to work jointly on Web services
specifications.
Sun and Microsoft have collaborated on certifying Sun's AMD
processor-based hardware for Windows. The companies have ensured that
Sun's software products, including StarOffice and the Java Runtime
Environment, can run on Windows XP Service Pack 2.
The two companies also said they intend to support a proposed standard
called Web Services Management so that their respective management
products can share information. They are also exploring ways to upgrade
their products so that a systems administrator could manage a mixed
network of Solaris and Windows servers from a single console,
Papadopoulos said.
In the area of network identify authentication, Sun and Microsoft
currently support different protocols for accessing a company network
and for logging on to several sites at once from a Web browser. Sun was
a founder and backer of the Liberty Alliance system for authentication,
while Microsoft was co-developer of an equivalent specification called
WS-Federation.
Executives at both companies said they have recognized this as a
problem and will be working to let their customers log on to both
Windows and Solaris servers at the same time. In the first half of next
year, the first results from this early work will be available,
Papadopoulos said.
In the area of Web services protocols, which define a way for machines
to share information automatically over Internet protocols, Sun and
Microsoft said they intend to work together to direct the development
of new specifications.
Executives pointed to a few cases where they have already been
co-authors of specifications, including WS-Management, WS-Addressing
and WS-Eventing. In the past, by contrast, Sun and Microsoft were on opposing sides of standards proposals.
"The change at this point is that we've found it a lot easier to figure
out what standards we should be working together on and designing in a
way that works well for both of us," said Andrew Layman, director of
distributed systems/interoperability at Microsoft.
He also said that collaborating on Web services during the
specification development process will help Microsoft and Sun quickly
create compatible products.
Company executives pointed to a few other areas of joint work,
including Sun's support of Microsoft's storage protocols. And the two
firms will be setting up a "competency center" at Microsoft's Redmond,
Wash., campus to allow customers to test out their applications on
Sun's gear.
Without providing specifics, Papadopoulos indicated that Sun and
Microsoft are exploring other areas of interoperability beyond what's
being done in standards bodies.
"I wouldn't be involved at this level and Gates wouldn't be involved at
this level if we thought these were just standards activities. There is
real tangible stuff that our customers have told us to solve," he said.
Rather than set up a specific timetable with ambitious co-development
projects, Microsoft and Sun executives chose to focus on near-term
joint projects in their first comprehensive update on their alliance.
"We're being very cautious. When we do have something to
announce, it's going to be looked at with a lot of interest," said
Microsoft's Layman. "We want to make sure it lives up to
expectations."