Sun
Microsystems has expanded its server line to include support for
Microsoft's
Windows Server operating systems, allowing Sun to bundle the software with its
x86 Sun Fire systems.
In addition to the OEM deal, the companies vowed to improve the
virtualisation performance between Windows Server and Solaris.
John Fowler, executive vice president of Sun's systems group, declared the
deal a victory for Sun hardware.
"Microsoft's recognition of our x64 systems and storage is a testament to the
superior system design at the heart of our product portfolio," he said.
Bob Muglia, senior vice president of servers and tools at Microsoft, was
similarly enthusiastic about Sun's 64-bit x86 server line.
"Today's announcement is another example of Microsoft's commitment to 64-bit
computing," he said.
"The Sun hardware platform is an excellent foundation for Windows-based
enterprise solutions."
Industry experts, however, believe that the virtues of Sun's servers had
little to do with the deal.
Jonathan Eunice, founder and principal IT advisor at analyst firm
Illuminata,
suggested that the Microsoft deal is more about a changing business climate than
any specific hardware or software product.
"In our networked, integrationist age, everything must work together,"
Eunice wrote in an
article
for a company blog.
"Just about every solution must cooperate with every other solution, even if
they compete."
Sun has traditionally promoted itself as a full system vendor from which
clients can purchase completely integrated solutions, and has dedicated its
resources to its Solaris operating system, Sparc processor and middleware
suites.
Over the past few years, however, Sun has been opening up. The firm released
Solaris under an open source licence, launched AMD Opteron and Intel Xeon
servers and settled its long-running feud with Microsoft.
This strategy has allowed Sun and its formerly proprietary technologies to
expand beyond the company walls. Sun
signed a
partnership with
IBM last month to
bring Solaris to Big Blue's x86 servers, for example.
Rob Enderle, founder and president of
The
Enderle Group, told
vnunet.com
that the IBM and Microsoft deals could signal a new path for Sun that may
eventually lead to a radical change in the company's structure.
The analyst suggested that, as Sun strikes deals to increase the appeal of
Solaris and its own servers, the company will begin to compete with itself and
prompt an internal rift.
"It would appear that the natural progression would be a separation of
hardware and software," said Enderle. "The eventual path that Sun is on is two
separate companies."
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