Sun Microsystems is a company that doesn’t get anywhere near as much attention in the techmeme world as Google, Yahoo or Microsoft. Which is kind of odd for a company whose motto seems highly relevant to this era of the Web – “The Network Is The Computer”.
I was listening to a podcast that Tim O’Reilly did with Business 2.0 the other day and, even though Tim is now acknowledging that the ‘web 2.0’ term is “a very broad umbrella” (which has been my point over the past 6 months or so), he still essentially says it’s about being in a “much more fully networked world”. Which brings me back to Sun – they’re all about networks and increasingly about the integration between the desktop and the Web, a topic which I’m becoming more and more interested in. Plus James Governor has been clueing me up to what Sun is doing these days, which helps too!
Sun’s latest stated vision is “everyone and everything participating on the network” and they talk about the “Participation Age” on their About page. With new CEO Jonathan Schwartz, Sun does seem to be opening up more. Jonathan Schwartz wrote in his latest blog entry about an upcoming new initiative that seems very 2.0 (or chmod 777 if you prefer):
“…you’ll see something very interesting next week start to appear on Sun’s web pages and throughout our on-line store. You’ll start to see product reviews written by users. You’ll see user defined ratings, right on our products. Just like book or product reviews at Amazon. We’re starting with just a few products, but it’ll ultimately extend all the way up to our highest end enterprise offerings.”
As well as attracting users, this will probably also have the effect of stirring up interest with bloggers. Which will result in Sun coming back into the light and getting more attention (yes, the Sun/light witticisms will be plentiful too!).
From another angle, James Governor noted in a recent blog entry that Sun has been somewhat isolated in recent years in terms of ‘coopetition’:
“Most other industry players have long responded to coopetition, both competing and cooperating with other major firms, and changed their business models accordingly.
Sun on the other hand often looked somewhat isolated. Vertically integrated yes, but isolated also.
It seems like Sun is now finally making that transition.”
So this may be the dawning of a new era for Sun, where their rays of light reach out and touch users – probably resulting in a warm reception.
Photo: podtech.net
Originally published on ReadWriteWeb (archived copy)