Suns Cross-Platform JES Broadens Choice
As the company extends its Java Enterprise System to Windows- and HP-UX-based servers, it must remember to follow through on its promises and continue to increase the accessibility of its core software.
Sun Microsystems decision to extend its Java Enterprise System to Windows- and HP-UX-based servers should give IT managers a healthy dose of platform independencethe kind that many have been demanding for years. Its another step for Sun down the path of open and cross-platform software. Its a path that promises choice for users and perhaps a return to prosperity for Sunif the company can maintain a steady course. By making JES more attractive to a wider set of companies, it will be in a better position to sell that technology to non-Sun shops, since these companies will no longer be forced to scrap their infrastructure, thus saving implementation costs and hassles. We commend this move because we believe customers should be able to choose an application platform without worrying about wholesale changes in their data centers and on clients desktops.
Read more here about Suns decision to extend its Java Enterprise System to Windows.
Click here for open-source advocates take on an open Java.
As we have seen in yesteryears network operating system wars, the hearts and minds of developers are the keys to market dominance. Any doubters should recall the fate of Novell, which lost its hold on the LAN market it pioneered, despite having technology that was more mature and feature-rich than its developer-friendly Windows conquerors.
Through broader platform support; its Linux strategy; and, we hope, an open-source initiative for Java, Sun has a fighting chance to become the development platform of choice.
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