Sun Proposes Do-It-All Cloud - Is Hydrazine a Live Mesh Challenger? (
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Some elements of Project Hydrazine appear similar to Microsoft's recently
announced Live Mesh strategy, which involves cloud computing and a sync
mechanism.
The Project Hydrazine strategy definitely pits Sun directly against
Microsoft in other areas—such as the developer and design tools space and the
concept of developer-designer workflow in particular.
An element of that will be Sun's JavaFX Transformer technology. JavaFX
Transformer is a set of plug-ins that plug into existing designer tools that
designers typically use, such as Photoshop, "and it will export these
assets like FX files and layering information and then you can import those
files into your development environment," Brewin said. He said the concept
is similar to what Microsoft does with its XAML (Extensible Application Markup
Language) and the way the software giant tries to facilitate designer-developer
workflow between users of its Expression design tools and its Visual Studio
developer tool set.
In Sun's case, rather than XAML, "JavaFX Script ties it all
together," Brewin said. "The Transformer technology and our NetBeans
plug-ins plug into JavaFX Script."
Asked if Sun would get into the design tools space, Brewin replied,
"Yeah, we have to; it's the only way to be successful. We're hiring a lot
of designers, not coders, and they're driving this." However, Brewin said
he does not see Sun delivering anything as specifically designer-focused as Photoshop
right off. "We need to walk before we can run," he said. He also said
Sun will likely not deliver a designer tools suite, but could partner with an
existing vendor for that functionality.
"Personally, I would much rather partner with somebody like Adobe in
the design space" for those extended designer capabilities, rather deliver
an extended suite of tools, he said.
Open source and best of breed could work for Sun
Michael Coté, an analyst with RedMonk, said of Sun, "It's a
long row to hoe for them or anyone else, like Microsoft. The fact that Sun is
integrating with the Adobe design tool chain instead of going it completely on
their own was a good surprise for me to hear about. More importantly, I'm
hoping it's indicative of Sun's general plan for building out the
developer-designer tool chain: pulling together the good parts no matter where
they come from instead of building their own stack, top to bottom."
Al Hilwa, an analyst with IDC, added, "There
is a big battle brewing for the unified developer platform of new devices. It
will take a long time to settle, but the stakes are high, since everything with
a screen will end up with some sort of run-time, that is to say many billions
of devices (several per every population of the planet). Dexterity with rich
content is the key competence for all future environments. Sun has so far
lagged Microsoft and Adobe in this, and there are many strong players on the
mobile side as well, such as Apple, Google, Nokia, etc. The JavaFX announcement
puts Sun in the game. The capabilities put them in the game, but not really in
a leapfrog situation."
Meanwhile, Brewin said Project Hydrazine would also support other clouds
such as Google App Engine and Amazon EC2, but also will support services from
vendors such as eBay and PayPal.
Brewin said the pieces are falling into place, with the storage components
probably coming along first. "This will roll out over time, and by this
time next year at JavaOne we should see a lot of this in place," he said.
Sun plans to deliver an early access release of its
JavaFX SDK (software development kit) in July.