Sun Hints At Open-Source Database Offering 167
An anonymous reader points out a ZDNet story which begins "Sun Microsystems has raised the possibility that it might offer customers its own database, a move that could trigger displeasure at Oracle but curry favor with open-source advocates," writing "Last week, during a meeting with financial analysts, Chief Executive Scott McNealy showed a slide that placed the words 'Sun DB' next to a list of existing database products. McNealy offered no details besides 'stay tuned.'"
Ahem (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Uhm... (Score:4, Insightful)
Make the PHB's feel all warm and fuzzy. Also see: StarOffice versus OpenOffice.
Throw money into an existing oss database instead. (Score:5, Insightful)
Their resources would be better spent on improving an existing open-source db. My personal favorit is Postgresql but hey, it's their money.
Re:Ahem (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Uhm... (Score:2, Insightful)
Do we really, _really_ need another OS/Free RDBMS? What is it going to do what others don't?
What does it matter ? If Sun wants to launch it, and it's under their not-so-opensource license, why not. It can't hurt. It doesn't cost us anything...
Wasn't that what OSS is all about ? Having the choice ?
Re:Ahem (Score:4, Insightful)
Sigh, Sun is the largest single commercial donator of source under GPL dwarfing IBM, SGI, HP and all the other commercial entities involved in GPL by a wide margin.
Just for laughs and to illustrate how risable your point is at the last count more of the Red Hat distribution had been donated by Sun than any other commercial entiry including Red Hat.
The more I read OpenSource (really Linux) advocates flaming Sun for some imagined misdemeanor or other the more I tend to conclude that Sun has been remarkably forbearing with the community as a whole and that if Sun have been a bit rude on occasions they have been rather less rude then the community right royally deserves.
Lets face it if you were to single out one major commercial player who has almost single handed made it possible for Linux ot exist its actually not IBM, SGI, HP but Sun. They were largely responsible for the creation of the commercial UNIX market, they were almost exclusively responsible for insisting on published standards, API's etc and they have made huge donations to the basic plumbing of Linux.
Sadly these hugely worthy but clearly boring activities are nothing compared to the IBM/HP/SGI eye candy which has little to do with fostering open standards and OpenSource and everything to do with moving tin, SW and services.
Sure they are abrasive but lets face it in the face of the abuse they have received I would be pissed as hell as well, talk about biting the hand that feeds.
Re:Ahem (Score:5, Insightful)
So you can't use CDDL code in Linux. So what? You can't use GPL code in FreeBSD. I don't hear the FreeBSD folks claiming that Linus is out to destroy FreeBSD.
And what's this about "denies its use by most of the open source world"? What FUD! You can use it all you damn well like. You just can't mingle it with GPL code and distribute the result.
You can, however, mingle CDDL code with BSD code and distribute the result.
Get some perspective. It's free. It's open source. Yes, the license is intentionally incompatible with the GPL. You'll get over it. You're no worse off than you were before.
Linux the greatest threat to Sun? (Score:3, Insightful)
No need. Just handy. (Score:4, Insightful)
2) Competition against proprietary. More open source solutions, less proprietary solutions. Another backstab to MSSQL
3) Open source = box of ideas. Port whatever Sun database has cool in its code base to other free databases, make them better.
4) Easier portability to other databases for proprietary software. If something uses SunDB and nothing else, having SunDB source you can easily write glue to make that thing run i.e. on PostgreSQL
5) "Do we need"... and does SUN need another not-quite-competitive piece of proprietary software? What is better, dump it or release as Open Source?
6) Open Source replaces negative competition with cooperation. There probably will be quite a bit current Open Source database developers can learn from Sun developers - and vice versa. And since it's no longer a trade sectret, the exchange is possible. Help? Why not?
7) The Name. Having such a name as SUN behind this thing, customers who would otherwise never trust the "bunch of hippies" who write Free Software may adopt it. And then more of Open Source.
8) Is it worse than others? Who knows what will the benchmarks show...
9) Another move towards OS - another example, another encouragement for others to open up their proprietary products.
10) Don't look the gift horse in the mouth.
Re:Ahem (Score:3, Insightful)
I also object to this FUD that Sun is out to destroy Linux. There is an amazing amount of badwill on Slashdot towards Sun.
Bruce Perens compared the new CDDL licence to Sun "holding a gun" to the heads of the Linux community and "asking them to be grateful for it". WTF? No one is forcing the Linux community to use this database or the patents previously discussed. It is Suns products, they can do what they want with them.
And we are totally free to ignore them if we want to.
Re:Linux the greatest threat to Sun? (Score:4, Insightful)
Fud fud and more goddamn fud more like it. "Sun has decided that Linux is a threat" "Sun are in bed with MS". You mean the settlement patent that Gosling recently said "means less and less to us".
Sun gave us Open Office, and a damn lot of support for free, as well as a shitload of other things, and now you are "wondering" (a sneakier more underhanded way of accusing them) if they are going to stop. Well, if that is the gratitude they get, don't be surprised if they do.
I wonder how long Sun will still distribute GNU licensed software with Solaris.
And what does this have to do with anything? They have no reason to remove it, and if they did this would only be an inconvenience to Solaris users. It would do nothing to hurt GNU/GPL/Linux or whatever.
It is only logical that Sun use it's resources against it major threat, which is now Linux and the GPL.
Just more unusbstantiated accusations.
Re:Ahem (Score:3, Insightful)
Its both. I would work for Sun under almost any conditions they set forth as long as I was paid a decent salary. From what I hear and know of Sun culture, its awesome. A company really run by geeks, which hasn't belped them in the marketing department, but has allowed them to do so kickin' work.
Is Sun's passive aggressive behavior, or other companies open pushing of free/open software better for the trend of free/open software?
Perhaps Sun doesn't feel the need to toot its own horn. After all, if anyone is going to look behind marketing glitz to see what's really going on, you would think it would be geeks. Geeks, who tend to be a little more suspicious and prone to fears of conspiracy and manipulation than the general populace, but such things tend to happen with greater intelligence.
Do people have free will and corporations are trying to ride that, or are we all pawns of corporations?
What a ridiculous question. When I woke up this morning I was free to choose any number of things. You have the choice to do anything. If you've been brainwashed by commercials and media, you have no one to blame except yourself (principally) and perhaps your parents.
Re:Ahem (Score:2, Insightful)
Sun's founders most notably Bill Joy come from a precursor of OpenSource so you could say that it is ingrained in Sun's culture. But more important than that is Sun's core belief that industry should innovate around open standards. Few companies now would publically disagree with this stance but when Sun started expousing this doctrine it was universally ridiculed by the same companies HP, IBM etc that the OpenSource (really Linux) community hold up to Sun as exemplars of how to support OpenSource. All this does is make the Linux advocates propounding these propositions look ridiculous and ungratefull to Sun and for that matter to anyone with any grasp of computing history.
Royally? Is it all at the forbearance of Scott McNeally, or is Scott McNeally at the forbearance of the skills, initiative and connections of people who work for Sun?
I don't know the answer to that you would need to talk to someone who works for Sun. However Scott and Johnathan sign the checks and the fact that they keep signing the checks to support a huge range of OpenSource projects from OpenOffice to Apache tends to suggest that it is Scott and Johnathan who are being forebearing.
Is Sun's passive aggressive behavior, or other companies open pushing of free/open software better for the trend of free/open software?
Sun responds when its pushed and does so with vigour, the OpenSource (linux) community pushes a lot and gets back rather less than it deserves.
For some strange reason the OpenSource (linux) community is much more receptive to blandishments from IBM. As an example the current ludicrous discussion about the merits of IBM's 500 expiring some non SW patent "donation" to OpenSource vs Sun's donation of 1600 current patents but under a license that not everyone likes. IBM's donation would appear to be largely useless but has no strings attached, Sun's appears to be very usefull but has strings as usual the community has become obsessed with the strings.
In my opinion if the OpenSource community wants to have a better relationship with by far its largest commercial backer then its largely up to the OpenSource community. Less whinging, less focus on style and more focus on substance would go a long way.
Re:Ahem (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Ahem (Score:2, Insightful)
You're counting contributions by sun employees semi-officially and/or on their own time. Sun as a corporate entity isn't as giving to the GPL as you have portrayed them.
Re:Ahem (Score:3, Insightful)
Really, so you have never heard of OpenOffice just the largest single donation of source under GPL (made by Sun) and Sun still continues to be by far in away the largest contributor with something like 100 full time staff.
Heard of gnome Sun is heavily involved in Gnome. They have made big donations to Apache, Mozilla and a whole range of other OpenSource projects.
Where do you think the NFS source code came from, PAM, XFN ext the list is pretty endless.
Perhaps Sun's problem is that they have given too much and given it in too wide a swathe of areas. Perhaps Sun should have concentrated on one narrow area like say donating a filesystem to run alongside all the other available filesystems with pretty much identical capabilites. Now who was that ??
Re:Ahem (Score:3, Insightful)
Wrong Sun has released the NFS source code and they also funded the University of Michigan to do a Linux port.
And last time anyone actually counted Sun had more code attributed to it in the Red Hat distribution than any other commercial company including Red Hat. OpenOffice is definitely a huge chunk of GPL code, but they also didn't develop that. They purchased a dying company and opensourced the company's product. It was a cheap move aimed at poking holes in Microsoft's officeware dominance.
Hardly cheap Sun paid 59.5 million dollars for StarDivision and still employs most of their staff who now work on the OpenOffice program.
Its also hardly dying
How about the cheap move of releasing 500 patents that are all due to expire and calling that a great donation. Did you applaud IBM's donation ???
I know full well about Sun's positions on the matter. I've raised the merits of Open Source repeatedly to my Sun sales and technical representatives, who generally frown at me and hand me Sun company dogma about how they're going to crush linux into the ground, and that open source is just a phase.
You think you do and thats obviously part of the problem. Don't worry though you have plenty of company.
Re:Linux the greatest threat to Sun? (Score:3, Insightful)
Bwwwwwwaaaaahahahaahahaha! Man, that is funny. The reason things aren't ported yet is that Solaris 10 IS NOT SHIPPING YET. Duh.
Solaris 10 is set to take a lot of customers away from IBM. IBM is very afraid.
Unlikely. Solaris 10 has some nifty features, but a lot of it is catch-up to AIX...I mean, you don't see a lot of Veritas Volume Manager and such sold for AIX because it comes with its own (good, unlike SDS) volume manager and filesystem. ZFS might finally get Solaris to par with AIX.
Solaris 10 has LPARs...excuse me, containers. Except they're not as nice as AIX's. Especially when you get to I/O.
DTrace is about all Solaris 10 has on AIX. It's neat. But it's not enough to make up the big gap: processor speed. SPARC chips, even SPARC IVs, are *S*L*O*W*. It amazes me still, but I've got Intel boxes than run faster than Suns and that is truly sad. Sure, I can get Opteron from Sun for the low-end stuff, but when I want to look at an 8-way box or a 16-way box, POWER5 really trumps Sun. And when you're paying per-CPU licensing fees, you figure you can live without DTrace.
And then there's the stackable p570 stuff that Sun doesn't even approach.
Sorry, IBM has no reason to run scared. Sun is the one running themselves into the ground.