Paul Krill
Editor at Large

Sun Microsystems reunion: The legacy continues

analysis
May 27, 20144 mins

Four-plus years after Oracle's takeover, Sun's former execs and employees reflect on company's accomplishments

It has been more than four years since once high-flying systems and software vendor Sun Microsystems met its official demise. The companyโ€™s rich technology legacy, however, lives on. About 750 former employees, including Sun co-founders Vinod Khosla and Andy Bechtolsheim, gathered at a reunion this past weekend in the parking lot of Sunโ€™s old office buildings in Silicon Valley to celebrate the companyโ€™s achievements.

Formed in 1982 and acquired by Oracle in early 2010, Sun was the birthplace of technologies such as the Java enterprise platform and language, which is still in great demand 19 years after its inception, and Network File System (NFS), for accessing files over a network. Sun was famous for pushing Unix and open standards computing amid a sea of proprietary systems, taking on established giants IBM, HP, and even Microsoft. The companyโ€™s roster featured an all-star team of technologists, including co-founder and Unix guru Bill Joy, Java inventor James Gosling, and XML co-inventor Tim Bray.

While longtime CEO Scott McNealy, Joy, and Sunโ€™s last CEO Jonathan Schwartz were not in attendance, Khosla, Bechtolsheim, and other Sun officials waxed sentimental about the companyโ€™s good old days. Listing Sunโ€™s most important achievements, Khosla, now a venture capitalist, cites its emphasis on distributed computing and NFS.

โ€œWhen we went to market, we made networking standard on every Sun [computer],โ€ Khosla said. DES encryption was included โ€œbecause I couldnโ€™t imagine how you could do networking without encryption,โ€ he said. NFS, meanwhile, arose out of a distributed computing vision, Khosla said. โ€œIt was one of the first open source projects, really.โ€

When asked if Java was Sunโ€™s top achievement, Gosling instead echoed Khoslaโ€™s sentiments: โ€œThe Sun tag line, โ€˜The Network is the Computerโ€™ โ€” people keep forgetting that Sun was the first company that took networking seriously.โ€ But having Java developers in so much demand these days is โ€œpretty cool,โ€ said Gosling, who is chief software architect at Liquid Robotics, which builds software for robots that roam the ocean. โ€œHiring Java developers is an expensive proposition, and Iโ€™m certainly trying to hire some right now.โ€

Bechtolsheim, pondering whether Sun might have been better off switching its product lines to Intel and Linux, recalled that Sparc chips outperformed Intel chips throughout the 1990s, while Linux had been a hobby project. โ€œUnfortunately, then, in the 2000 era, after the dot-com crash, both Intel and AMD ultimately made faster CPUs and Linux was a lot more mature and customers started switching over to a Linux-Intel combination,โ€ said Bechtolsheim, who is now chairman of cloud networking vendor Arista Networks. At that point, it was very difficult for Sun to adjust, he said. But both Solaris and Sparc hardware continue to be developed at Oracle.

As far as how Oracle has handled Sun technologies since the acquisition, Khosla said he had not paid much attention to it, other than tracking the lawsuit between Oracle and Google over the use of Java in the Android mobile platform. โ€œIโ€™m sure [the case] will continue for a while.โ€

Gosling reiterated his contentions that Oracle has been OK for Java but not for Solaris. โ€œOddly enough, theyโ€™ve done a way better job with Java than Iโ€™ve ever expected,โ€ Gosling said. But Oracle messed up on Solaris, pricing it too high, he said.

Khosla, though, had a pessimistic prognosis for the Apache Hadoop distributed computing platform, labeling it an outdated batch processing system. โ€œHaving a batch process this day and age is silly. I always think of it as going back to pre-Sun days.โ€

This article, โ€œSun Microsystems reunion: The legacy continues,โ€ was originally published at InfoWorld.com. Follow the latest developments in business technology news and get a digest of the key stories each day in the InfoWorld Daily newsletter. For the latest business technology news, follow InfoWorld on Twitter.

Paul Krill

Paul Krill is editor at large at InfoWorld. Paul has been covering computer technology as a news and feature reporter for more than 35 years, including 30 years at InfoWorld. He has specialized in coverage of software development tools and technologies since the 1990s, and he continues to lead InfoWorldโ€™s news coverage of software development platforms including Java and .NET and programming languages including JavaScript, TypeScript, PHP, Python, Ruby, Rust, and Go. Long trusted as a reporter who prioritizes accuracy, integrity, and the best interests of readers, Paul is sought out by technology companies and industry organizations who want to reach InfoWorldโ€™s audience of software developers and other information technology professionals. Paul has won a โ€œBest Technology News Coverageโ€ award from IDG.

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