Oracle Purchase of Sun: "A Game Changer"

 

In late April 2009 Oracle announced its $7.4 Billion purchase of Sun Microsystems. As you can imagine, this deal will have a significant impact on the IT industry, but just how much of an impact remains to be seen. Invariably acquisitions of this size and nature will be examined for any possible anti-trust issues such as anti-competitive influences on the market-place. This process by regulators will be done here and abroad and the end-result may be the necessity to sell-off some assets of the newly combined business. If you are looking for an excellent in-depth analysis of this deal I highly recommend Bruce Guptill’s article in SandHill.com The Impact of Oracle – Sun. In it Guptill sees a totally changed IT Industry with Oracle emerging as a “portfolio” company with the following abilities and offerings:

·         Hardware

·         OS

·         Middleware

·         Applications

·         Development tools

·         Databases

·         Production environments for Hosting

·         SaaS

·         On-premise subscription services; and

·         Consulting solutions (vertical and horizontal).

 

Although Sun is primarily a hardware vendor, Guptill sees this as a play for Sun’s software capability. He quotes Oracle’s CEO, Larry Ellison, “Sun's Java programming language and Solaris operating system were the main attractions for Oracle”; and specifically as regards Java, “the single most important software asset we have ever acquired.”  Guptill believes this asset alone places Oracle at the epicenter of the industry. Sun has also played a key role in open source by opening Java and Solaris to developers and this should give Oracle the ability to influence such software development especially in the following specific vertical markets: financial services, government, academia, and high-performance computing. Lest we forget the hardware business, Sun’s server and storage revenue have been estimated at an annual amount of $7 billion and $9 billion respectively. All of the Sun components, from software to hardware, should provide Oracle the foundation to build its SaaS and Cloud Computing services.

Can Oracle successfully integrate the services and hardware businesses that come with the purchase of Sun? Guptill tells us to be on the lookout for Oracle Management to sell of some of these hardware lines, or alternatively as mentioned above, regulators may force Oracle to divest itself of some of these assets.

Guptill concludes his article with a brief description of the impact such a purchase has on several stakeholders and competitors. For example:

For Sun: This probably means the demise of Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz who had pushed for the IBM acquisition of Sun rather than Oracle. Sun Chairman, Scott McNealy, although a friend of Larry Ellison, will probably go as well since a ship needs only one captain.

For MySQL: It should fit nicely into the Oracle family as a web server database engine.

For IBM: This was a lost opportunity at more profits and the ability to rein in Oracle competition. Also Sun’s capabilities would have enhanced IBM’s Cloud Computing efforts, but now this advantage goes to Oracle.

For SAP: Guptill sees the advantage going to SAP in the interim while Oracle’s sales teams learn how to integrate Sun products into the Oracle family. I am not so sure I agree. In light of SAP’s recent sales history any advantage may be illusory. See SandHill.com Software News Summary article SAP Struggles. The title tells it all.

For Hardware Vendors: For those that have partnered with Oracle in the past the loss could be significant.

For Users: Future investments in Sun hardware may be put on hold as the install base waits for reassurances on the direction of the server and storage lines of business.

Never a dull moment.

 

Sun Let's Software Vendors Run SaaS Without Code Rewrites

 

Andy Patrizio reports for InternetNews.com on a new offering from Sun Microsystems that will allow software vendor’s customers to convert from an on premise version of their application to SaaS using existing technologies.  The good news is that this conversion can be done without rewriting code, which in some cases can take many engineers an inordinately long period of time to design and then test the new architecture.  This is all made possible through Sun’s new “virtualization service”.  Sun or a Sun partner will then host the application.  Of course the service only “supports applications hosted on a Sun server using Solaris, Solaris' Containers virtualization technology and xVM, Sun's virtualization software.”


The advantage to this service was explained by Vince Vasquez, business development manager for SaaS programs at Sun:


"People see the demand for on-demand but they are stuck with a year or more of development time without actually knowing if there's a market there for their product.  With virtualization, they can get into that market right now."


If this is of interest, I strongly recommend reading Patrizio’s article entitled, Sun Latest to Help App Vendors Get 'SasSy'.  In it Patrizio reports on the success to date of this service with a case study and also discusses pricing and Sun’s 90-day free trial offer.