By
Martin LaMonica
Thursday, October 26 2006 09:56 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,61962459,00.htm
Sun Microsystems intends to commence open-sourcing Java by the end of this
year and complete the process in 2007, according to the company's executive vice
president of software, Rich Green.
Last August, the Java creator said it intended to open-source
the components of the Java programming language and associated software.
On Friday, Green
said Sun is "on plan" and intends to release significant pieces of the Java
platform in the fourth quarter of this year.
"We did it with Java Enterprise Edition (server) with the
GlassFish project, and we will be doing it with Java Standard Edition and
Java Micro Edition, which is pretty exciting," he said.
By releasing the source code to Java Standard Edition, the software to run
desktop Java programs, and Java Micro Edition for handheld devices, Sun hopes to
invite more developers to build products with Java.
Sun also intends to eventually release its Java Enterprise System, its Java
server software suite, to open source.
Separately, Green said Sun is developing "tailored solutions" around its
Solaris operating system along the lines of what it did with its "Thumper"
storage server.
"Historically, when (you) think of network-attached storage, you see it
implemented as a closed system, and there is an inability to innovate on top,"
Green said.
Its storage server brings commodity hardware economics to that market, which
Sun will be pursuing in other areas, he said.
"There are whole industries whose business models and margins are based on
proprietary value," Green said, declining to specify which product areas Sun is
eyeing in particular. "That is not going to be the case for much longer."
Sun is targeting hardware companies and software developers that could build
products on top of OpenSolaris,
the open-source edition of Solaris, he added.
Rather than build custom chips, Sun hopes that these partners will use
OpenSolaris, which runs on commodity servers and desktops.