Talk to Sun's 'Open Source Diva' 330
Danese Cooper is Manager of Sun's Open Source Program Office. A Google search on Danese turns up more than 1000 results. She's a frequent speaker at IT industry events and conferences, and is, without question, Sun's staunchest internal Open Source advocate. Sun is moving toward Open Source in fits and starts, and Danese is behind a lot of that motion. Feel free to ask her anything you want (one question per post. please) about the trials and tribulations of being an Open Source person within a company that hasn't yet fully grasped the concept, and how she goes about trying to change that. We'll post her answers to 10 of the highest-moderated questions within the next week or so. The only question she can't answer is whether/when Java might be Open Sourced. I already asked her, and she replied, "Sadly, I have no news on that..."
How does it feel... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How does it feel... (Score:3, Flamebait)
Jesus christ you sexist twat - do you think that maybe she keeps ahead of the game in exactly the same way as other *male* human beings? Maybe?
Re:How does it feel... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Male circumcision is a barbaric ritual (Score:2)
Re:How does it feel... (Score:2)
Diva derives from 'goddess' so if slashdot was really non-sexist, it would have to consider Linus, RMS, et. al. to be god-like. Oh, wait a minute...
OpenOffice (Score:5, Interesting)
OpenOffice initiative?
Which anagram of your name do you like best? (Score:3, Funny)
Codes are open /. AC does reopen
An opcode seer
A code reopens
A creed so open
As code opener
A score opened
Redo open case
CEO dares open
Ease porn code?
or for
Is OpenOffice pushed as internal standard? (Score:4, Insightful)
However, another impression that we have is that Sun wants other companies to use it, but Sun does not. I met quite a few people from Sun, and they don't use OO at all. A few Sun developers have downloaded it and played with it, and went back to MS Office. Funny thing is, those Sun presenters make jokes about Microsoft during their presentation, but they are all using MS Office and MS Windows. For that, I think it's not even funny.
Is this OO initiative a political game only, or is Sun serious about pushing OO to the enterprise environment? What are the efforts inside Sun to push OO as the standard office tools? What office tools do you use? Same for Scott McNealy.
Re:Is OpenOffice pushed as internal standard? (Score:2)
Under Windows.
Seen that quite a few times.
Not entirely unexpected considering that Solaris s**ks on laptops due to lack of APM support and Sun's policy forbids using Linux or BSD for presenting anything to an external audience.
So sun's unix geeks have no choice but to present with Soffice under windows presentations that have been written on a unix system.
Microsoft Judgement Effect? (Score:3, Interesting)
Much appreciated.
Money From Open Source/Free Software (Score:5, Interesting)
In light of this do you believe that it is possible to make money from open source/free software alone or does a company need a hardware arm like Sun?
Good question - but (Score:3, Insightful)
Companies where their core business model is to sell support for Open Source software seem to be dropping like flies. While it is clear that Open Source can be a good way to support another business model (such as Open Sourcing software for hardware that you are selling), do you agree that selling or supporting Open Source software, as a business model in itself, has been a failure?
Re:Money From Open Source/Free Software (Score:2)
You are assumming "open source" == "free". The actual question is whether this assumption is true or not (and, despite claims to the contrary here on SlashDot, I think it is possible that this assumption is true).
If you assumme this is true, a further question is whether some non-free product can somehow be linked to a free product so that the company makes money. Broadcast TV seems to indicate that vast sums of money can be made this way, but it is not clear if any such setup can be done for source code. Except for zealots on SlashDot, most people are asking if this is possible.
However you worded the question as though you assummed "open source"=="free" is a true statement. That has not been proven.
Has StarOffice been a failure? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Has StarOffice been a failure? (Score:1)
For a couple of reasons - a lot of corporate cultures equate free with worthless, and for the benefit of bundled software sellers so they can say 'This PC comes with $600 worth of software'
I don't know if that means it'll be available on a 'free use' license or not though. (which might sound odd, but I understand that their strategy behind this project is to take office suite market share away from microsoft).
Re:Has StarOffice been a failure? (Score:2, Informative)
A followup on that question: can Sun break the normal reluctance of major companies to use something without all three of
- a distribution kit (a CD at least)
Here is your CD [sun.com]
- a service contract (even if they don't actually buy it) and
Here is your support contract, both free and pay versions. [sun.com]
- a popular book.
Here are enough books to fill a shelf. [amazon.com]
You forget (Score:2)
In my company we have 2 MS Office Licenses (one 97 and one 2k) and the rest of us run StarOffice 5.2. It saves us some cash and spares us time in the evergoing "keep-your-licenses-at-handy-just-in-case-struggle ".
Now that SUN moved away from the "let's teake over the desktop" strategy used in 5.2 I think that the suite will become even more attractive.
Cudos to SUN from me and my pals for keeping StarOffice alive. We NEED alternatives. No matter if the are free or not.
Cheers..
Open source for everything? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Open source for everything? (Score:1)
I was about to ask the same thing. Although, it may not be an attractive question to open source zealots, I'd love to hear her opinion on it.
Moderators, please moderate parent up!
Re:Open source for everything? (Score:2)
"Here, lets open source trusted solaris"
Competition with other Open Source OS's (Score:5, Interesting)
Does Sun feel at all threatened by the increasing awareness and usage of other open source UNIX-like operating systems? Does Sun feel open-sourcing their software is a necessary step to compete with the free operating systems and software?
Not fully grasped? (Score:3, Insightful)
Um, I'm pretty sure Sun *has* grasped the concept, but it doesn't suit their busines model.
But, for a question, how about "What is the general understanding of OSS at Sun?"
Open Source Solaris? (Score:5, Interesting)
I appreciate that there's a fair chunk of intellectual property in there (and probably a fair amount of overlap with Sparc), but it'd be nice to see.
Re:Open Source Solaris? (Score:2)
Or at least open-source the kernel... (Score:3)
An open-source Solaris kernel would be able to integrate the recently-released IBM-JFS and SGI-XFS filesystems (which both seem better than ufs), along with many device drivers from Linux (with some required rewrites, of course).
Sun has come 90% of the way towards really riding the Open-Source wave. 100% would not necessarily require completely opening Solaris.
An open-source Solaris kernel on Itanium would also really screw up your competetors hopes of selling proprietary UNIX on that platform, as well...
The drawback would be that we might be able to see some sensitive information on e1[05]k partitioning and hot-swap features.
Do the Sun decision-makers see it differently?
Re:Open Source Solaris? (Score:2, Informative)
Sun actually had SunOS available on i386 before that (on the Sun 386i).
Why is Open Source right for Sun? (Score:1, Interesting)
Why, then, would it be in Suns best interest to move towards open source when that movement could lead customers to a move away from their hardware?
Thanks,
Corporate culture (Score:5, Interesting)
But how is the internal climate?
Fitting Open Soruce in a Corporate Environment (Score:5, Interesting)
How to be persuasive about Open Source. (Score:5, Interesting)
How do you explain Open Source to people driven by profit in a persuasive way?
Past Losses And Future Hopes (Score:1)
Why isn't JBoss certified? (Score:5, Interesting)
There has been some speculation that Sun is uncomfortable with certifying JBoss [jboss.org] as a J2EE-compliant container. Mark Fleury, president of the JBoss team, has said "Sun quoted a price for that certification suite that is beyond the current financial resources of the JBoss team." Is there any possibility that Sun will relax these certification fee requirements for open-source initiatives such as JBoss, especially when they meet the technical requirements as specified by Sun?
- Rev.^^ My Favourite (Score:1)
OpenOffice and Sun perceptions (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, will Sun try this year to combat the misconception that buying Sun means spending big bucks on hardware?
After all the $999 Netras and Sunblades have played well in Unix-only houses but the common IT professional still seems to think they have to beaucoup bucks to be a Sun house?
_____________________________________
Internal resistance (Score:5, Interesting)
What arguments are people that work with you using to counter-attack your proposals? And do you feel (or know) that this is also how other big companies react inside their offices to Open Source in general?
not as popular as all that... (Score:1, Offtopic)
Leaving x86 market (Score:2, Interesting)
Open Source, politics or economics? (Score:5, Interesting)
Open Source Java (Score:4, Insightful)
Me, too. Me, too.
This is the only thing that interests me, and I've often felt the way to keep the Microsoft wolves at bay was to Open Source Java, which I feel would push it much further than Sun can. Keeping a lid on Java may be the best gift to Redmond in terms of .NET acceptance, not that having hoards of PHB's saying, "Nobody ever got fired for choosing IBM^H^H^HMicrosoft", hurts their efforts.
If I had a question, which she may be demurring on already, it would be, "What's the big obstacle? Or is it one of those Committee things, where nobody will accept respobsibility for standing in the way and points fingers at the Committee"? I'll understand, if in the interests of preserving her position she can't answer that, either.
Re:Open Source Java (Score:2)
Re:Open Source Java (Score:2)
Sun has to maintain backwards compatibility with everything that is currently java, and thus would either have to stick with the current Java or maintain two seperate Javas (deprecation can only do so much...and it can't really effect more than the API). If they chose to stick with the current Java, customers would be likely to choose a competing java for non-legacy applications.
No matter what Sun chose to do, it would end up hurting them. It may end up helping Java immensly which would help Sun in the long run, but that's a hard argument for people to swallow.
Re:Open Source Java (Score:2)
What are the motives? (Score:1)
Mono / .NET (Score:5, Interesting)
Danese vs. CmdrTaco! (Score:1, Offtopic)
JBoss and Tomcat. (Score:5, Interesting)
For independent individuals to become J2EE experts, they need a web container to train on. The only inexpensive solution is Tomcat and JBoss (both open source solutions). And JBoss is the first to support the newest version of EJBs (2.0).
I would find it in your best interest to support both projects. What does the future hold for Sun, Tomcat, and JBoss?
Re:JBoss and Tomcat. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:JBoss and Tomcat. (Score:2)
Ummm, I don't know about JBoss, but isn't Tomcat the reference implementation of Sun's specs?
Yes, it is.
- Rev.Financial aspects (Score:2)
How is your position perceived inside your company ?
Do you spend your time fight ing to get a budget ? Do your business plan includes the placement of Sun consultants in big companies ?
"Linux" package management / GNU utils (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you see Solaris incorporating some of the package management features found in Linux systems?
Also, Unix vendors many times have very feature-incomplete versions of utilities compared to their respective GNU versions. For instance, GNU tar (while lacking some of the Solaris tar options) has many features that are extremely handy. Do you see Unix vendors in the future incorporating more free tools over the proprietary ones they have, and if so what do you think the time frame is? Do you think that Unix vendors that move towards GNU tools and make their installations more "Linux"-like will have an edge, or will moving to unfamiliar tools be a hindrance?
Big Iron, Little Iron (Score:5, Interesting)
Sun's credibility with the open source community (Score:4, Interesting)
So my questions are: do you encounter these credibility problems? Are they a problem for you? Are you (or Sun) doing anything to change these perceptions?
OT: She's not the only one. (Score:2)
Geez Robin, you act like she's the only one, aren't most of us in that boat? I would guess that not all of us work with OSS-knowledgeable PHBs. They're learning slowly, but it takes time.
Working at Sun? (Score:2, Interesting)
Sure it may seem cheesy but whatever it takes...
Please read this document [broody.org].
Integrity (Score:5, Interesting)
At what point do users and developers need to pull the rug out from under vendors who consistently lie, such as Sun? What surprisies me here is that people seem to require no moral or ethical dimension to a company, despite the actual business harm dealing with such a company poses. There have been a number of other cases where soon-to-be open sourced software went closed source, so the danger in these situations is real.
Microsoft, after a long history of BS, actually seems to be doing the right thing with C# standards wise, and I suppose the proof will be in the pudding if go-mono.com and the GNU Portable
C# and .NET still "practically closed" (Score:2)
***This ECMA effort may be primarily symbolic, however, since only a player with enormous resources and funding could possibly implement the standard. If you use
Don't know if Mr. Ross is right, but I assume he's more connected than I am.
With respect to your comment:
>Other standards like Ethernet seem to have done
>relatively well compatability wise, while using
>Java across multiple platforms is an exercise in
>frustration.
Tried porting any C other than straight ANSI? Believe me, though toasters running weather modeling might be "goofy", Java makes some real headway into writing once and running anywhere. Limewire.com and Netbeans.org come to mind as pretty good xplat software that wouldn't be on our OS of choice without Java.
Yes, I realize Netbeans wouldn't be anywhere without Java since it's a Java IDE, but you get the point. I've seen a lot higher percentage (for x software packages, y had a Mac version) of software come to Mac Classic (which didn't have UNIX underneath) from Java than from C codebases.
I'm not against you being right about C#, and hope it does an even better job of making weather predicting toasters, but I'm not optimistic.
Typically JavaLobby Hooey (Score:2)
This is typical of Ross. Not only does it not make sense (is there some limit at which we consider a system "tto big" to publish specs on?), but its patently false. The larger the system, the more necessary the spec is, not the other way around.
Re:C# and .NET still "practically closed" (Score:2)
Firstly, cannibalizing one's own business for the purpose of potential revenues is a common tactic for aggresive businesses. Secondly, the Windows market on the desktop is saturated, so they stand little to lose. Where they stand to gain is in the services and frameworks markets. By standardizing .Net, they can potentially knock Sun out of the frameworks market and then really start turning the screws on services.
Re:C# and .NET still "practically closed" (Score:2)
And the cross platform service/multipupose language market is growing, Windows GUI apps are no longer the be all and end all of programming.
Java also has grown to have a real lock on the enterprise level of this market, despite being a closed standard. So I think Microsoft by letting go-mono.com and its ilk port their stuff really looks to have a competitive advantage. My money is that in a few quarters if/when it looks like Microsoft's strategy is succeeding Sun will finally pop Java into the truly open souce catagory.
Ah yes, a question. (Score:2)
What happens to Solaris 9? (Score:2)
Why don't Sun rig more polls? (Score:2)
How can we help..... (Score:5, Interesting)
Photo of Danese Cooper (Score:2, Informative)
she [sun.com] looks like....
Re:Okay, I'm a sexist pig for posting this. (Score:2)
Getting a financial company to make the switch (Score:4, Interesting)
How has your career been affected by your stance? (Score:2)
iPlanet vs. JBoss (Score:4, Interesting)
Why Open Source? Or Free Software? (Score:2, Interesting)
Open Source. Well, okay... hardware? (Score:4, Interesting)
Why OpenSource (Score:3, Interesting)
The future of Liberty Alliance (Score:5, Interesting)
I've been following Microsoft's .NET strategy for quite some time and have been quite interested in the Passport vs Liberty Alliance scenario.
Firstly, what exactly is happening with Liberty Alliance at the moment? I got the impression that the iniative was started as a marketing oppositing against Passport as there doesn't appear to be any visibility of the implementation on the web site [projectliberty.org].
Secondly, there is also an open source source initially from .GNU for this central authentication service [dotgnu.org]. Essentially both Liberty Alliance and .GNU are trying to provide an opposition framework to Passport - and yet the nature of the concept and the existance of the two projects seem to be self depricating. If everyone and their dog develop a centralised authentication service that spans services across networks - people would probably use Passport purely because of its market share.
Would it not be a good idea to somehow merge the work done to offer a unified opposition to Passport?
JVM (Score:2)
StarOffice for Mac OS X? (Score:2, Interesting)
Anything else but just opening up? (Score:2)
What that in mind, what do you want Sun to do as far as software as a whole goes. Should they take all that is good with Solaris, open source it and try to unfied it as one OS that Sun will use, or will there only be certain pieces of software that will be open sourced?
Money from advocating `Good things`. (Score:2, Interesting)
Java standardization through the JCP (Score:2, Interesting)
However, could you enumerate exactly in which ways Sun as a company is granted extra priviliges in the JCP, compared to other companies, and elaborate upon why these extra priviliges are there? Removing them could be a huge boost of the popularity of Java within the open source community.
Thanks!
Mats Henricson
Losses on the front. (Score:2)
Open Source and Privacy. (Score:3, Interesting)
Scott Mc Nealy (your esteemed *cough*cough* CEO) once said : "You have no privacy. Get over it". I may have a couple of words wrong, but you get the drift.
Considering Sept. 11th aftermath, the new rules being put into place in the USA (some say they are privacy-invading) and the fact that a lot of Open Source software reject the position of Mr McNealy, what do you think will happen?
I think this question is especially relevant, since a lot of users are getting very wary of large companies (Redmondia comes to mind) tracking each and every gesture through the latest version of their software.
Many thanks in advance.
Limiations of Open Source in the Enterprise (Score:3, Interesting)
Business value of open source (Score:2, Interesting)
-Thomas
You go girl (Score:3, Insightful)
Open Source Java = Standardised Java? (Score:2, Insightful)
(It seems to me that the only reason C# is really going before ECMA is to rub Sun's nose in the fact that Java has been pulled from ECMA a couple of times before now.)
Jon
What does Sun want? (Score:2)
Thank you.
Rocketboy
Internal development practices and tools (Score:5, Interesting)
os ethic.. (Score:2, Interesting)
Sun v. Open Source v. Java (Score:2, Interesting)
How do you deal with these type of questions when you are speaking internally?
Are you an "Open Source is the One True Way [TM]" kind of person, or are you an "Open Source Can Help Us Crush Our Competitors As Long As We Don't Give Up The Good Stuff [Java]" kind of person?
I realize that this question is kind of trollish, but I'd really like to know where you personally divide "Open Source" and "Good for Sun".
Where are the Lighthouse and Sarrus apps? (Score:4, Interesting)
After these apps were end-of-lifed, an effort was made to tidy up their source code and release them as some flavor of open source. For reasons that have never been clear to me, the release did not happen.
Can you shed light on this? Or perhaps give someone or something a nudge and get the balling rolling again?
Ray Ryan
Former UI Lead of Lighthouse Design
Do you get it? (Score:2)
Will Sun ever make a native compiler? (Score:2, Interesting)
The advantage of native compilation (as the GCJ folks already know) is a bit of improvement in performance, as well as a reduction in startup time amd memory usage because JVM/JIT compilation is not needed (though the runtime still is). Sun has already put a lot of optimization tricks into Hotspot, so putting all that into a native compiler shouldn't be too hard. Native compilation would probably be most beneficial for desktop apps using Swing.
Why close the source? (Score:2, Interesting)
Sun's Fall From Open Source Grace (Score:2, Interesting)
The first Sun Workstation I used, a Sun 1, Serial number 184, had an OS very close to vanilla BSD and, in order to put an Ethernet card and a slip line on it (so it could be used as a router) we could modify the drivers and recompile the kernel.
So, Sun was an Open Source leader in the 1980's -- before the term was even coined.
Could you give us any insight as to why Sun decided to close its OS' source? And start charging extra money for its compilers? (Why, so SUN could have $$ to devote to developing NeWS?)
It seems to me that the reason SUN needs an "open source advocate" at all is their fall from grace 15 years ago. You had it right the first time.
NeWS (Score:2)
I truly believe that if Sun had open-sourced a reference implementation of NeWS back in 1985 that right now it would be Scott McNealy on the government witness stand right now and everybody as SlashDot would call them $un. This is because Sun would be in control of the NeWS standard and could propose and release any enhancements to it before anybody else. They could also close-source it, or close-source the enhancements (like people worry about MSoft doing with .net), if they wanted. But to do any of this it had to be accepted, and it was not going to be accepted when it cost vast amounts of money and there was another thing (X) that, while obviousy 100 times crappier, was free (well $115 for a tape of the source code).
More opportunities like OpenOffice? (Score:2)
How would Sun feel about, for example, a RAD tool which competed directly with VB+ASP but was not (or at least not primarily) aimed at Java?
How about a truly open Exchange+Outlook killer suite?
Can Sun open-source NeWS? (Score:2)
When will OpenOffice be Free Software ? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:open source != gpl (Score:2)
A list of Error 404 - file not found links.... :)
I'm still wondering if this is a simple error or a very funny joke about the endless number of licenses....
Re:open source != gpl (Score:2)
Re:open source != gpl (Score:2)
Re:Question about Solaris x86 (Score:2)