sun

sun

News about sun
  • SMB server buying guide: The major players

    Today's server offerings are no longer strictly tailored for the enterprise. As the small to medium business (SMB) sector become more IT dependent, tier one vendors are beginning to package server solutions for the mid-market.

  • Oracle making Java, Solaris certifications pricier

    Later this year, Oracle will begin requiring people interested in gaining Java and Solaris certifications to attend "hands-on" training courses, at an additional cost of thousands of dollars.

  • Oracle moves Sun docs, sparking user debate

    Oracle's recent move to switch Sun Microsystems documentation to Oracle support infrastructure has some users up in arms, since the original links currently redirect to a general table of contents.

  • The Grill: Oracle's Angus MacDonald

    Computerworld Australia talks to Angus MacDonald, Chief Technology Officer at Oracle's A/NZ Systems Line of Business about the local implications of the Oracle and Sun merger.

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    James Cook University moves away from Compellent, Sun and Storage Tech to IBM's XIV

    Plagued with “exorbitant” maintenance costs due to out of control data growth, Queensland’s James Cook University (JCU) has overhauled its storage area network (SAN) in a $1 million upgrade to IBM’s XIV system.

Features about sun
  • Sun tussles with de-duplication startup

    Sun Microsystems is suing startup GreenBytes for allegedly claiming that Sun stole its data de-duplication technology.

  • Sun's Rock doomed from start, analysts say

    Sun's development Rock processor was a troubled project that may never have stood a chance, analysts said following reports that the chip had been axed.

  • Data center derby heats up

    Network thoroughbred Cisco jumps into the blade server market. Server stallion HP adds security blades to its ProCurve switches. IBM teams up with Brocade. Oracle buys Sun. And everybody courts that prize filly VMware.

  • Oracle will stay in the hardware business, Ellison says

    Oracle plans to stay in the hardware business following its planned US$7.4 billion acquisition of Sun Microsystems, CEO Larry Ellison has said, adding more detail to earlier statements made by the company.

  • King of the dynamic IDEs

    Komodo IDE 5 from ActiveState is the most comprehensive code editor and debugger available for enterprise teams that develop applications using a range of dynamic languages. Komodo's strong debugging skills are blended with broad-based coding support for Perl, PHP, Python, and Ruby, not to mention Tcl, Java, C, C++, Visual Basic, and many more. With powerful HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and XML support, Komodo is a great Web 2.0 companion as well.

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