Sun tries to change software game with Orion
- 26 February, 2003 08:11
- Comments
Sun Microsystems Inc. has laid out details of a new program called project Orion that will see the company ship all of its key software products packaged with the Solaris operating system in synchronized quarterly releases.
Jonathan Schwartz, executive vice president of software at Sun, unveiled Orion Tuesday during the second day of Sun's analyst conference here, calling it "the redefinition of an operating system." While Schwartz provided limited details on the new project, he did say that Sun plans to ship all of its infrastructure products such as the Sun ONE (Open Net Environment) Web Server, Application Server and its server management products along with Solaris -- Sun's flavor of Unix. By including all of its software packaged as one product, Sun is hoping to make life easier on customers trying to manage myriad applications with differing licensing and pricing schemes.
"(Companies) have had to hand-assemble the parts that we can deliver on the system itself," Schwartz said, during his presentation. "We will be delivering all of the products on a quarterly release train that will become a single product called Solaris."
Sun is banking on the notion that companies are in search of a more simplified way to manage their software purchases. Up to this point, most companies buy a variety of products such as an application server or Web server from different companies, which means they need to keep track of a wide range of pricing models. Sun said it can make this process easier by giving customers the option of buying one, entire software suite from Sun with a common licensing model.
The company has positioned this attack against Microsoft Corp. and IBM Corp. -- both of which offer a similar line of infrastructure software for running business applications.
Sun has yet to provide details on how Orion might be priced but said it could come as a yearly subscription fee or a model based on the number of users within a company, for example. Companies will have the option of purchasing part of the Orion software suite and replacing the Sun ONE application server with a competing product from a company such BEA Systems Inc., Schwartz said. Sun plans to make its pricing public in the coming months.
One reason for this new approach stems from the way customers have reacted to the quarterly release cycle for Solaris, Schwartz said. Sun releases Solaris updates every quarter with new patches, bug fixes and options. It now plans to release all of its software products on this same schedule -- again to try and make life simpler on customers, Schwartz said.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email Computerworld
- Follow Computerworld on twitter
- Get the Whole Picture Why Most Organizations Miss User Response Monitoring—and What to Do About It
- Oracle IT Modernization Series Modernization: The Path to SOA
- Eight things senior managers need to know about data encryption
- Oracle Database 11g for Data Warehousing and Business Intelligence
- Eliminating Tape
-
The NBN, service providers and you... what could go wrong?
-
NBN build gaining momentum daily: Quigley
-
FTC chairman: Do-not-track law may not be needed
-
Kindle sales soar but Amazon mum on actual numbers
-
Wall Street Beat: IPOs, M&A, chip news stir tech optimism
-
Windows 7 for Dummies®
-
Office 2007 All-In-One Desk Reference for Dummies
-
Computers for Seniors for Dummies, 2nd Edition
-
Teach Yourself Visually Windows 7
-
Microsoft Office
-
Windows 7 for Dummies® Dvd+book Bundle
-
MYOB Software for Dummies 6E Australian Edition
-
Office 2007 for Dummies
-
Windows 7 for Seniors for Dummies®









Comments
Post new comment