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Volume 2, Number 17 -- May 5, 2005

Solaris 10 Tops 1.3 Million Downloads, Gets Oracle 10g Support


by Timothy Prickett Morgan


At Sun Microsystems' quarterly product announcements this week, which were done in Washington, D.C., as Sun stresses its strong ties to government computing, John Loiacono, the executive vice president in charge of Sun's Software Group, said Solaris 10 had surpassed 1.3 million downloads since its launch. While the download rate for the new Solaris has slowed, it is still a very big number.

Sun is distributing Solaris 10 binaries for X86 and Sparc iron for free on servers with four or fewer processors. In the middle of February, about two weeks after Sun launched Solaris 10, it had about 500,000 Solaris 10 downloads and had an initial run rate in those first two weeks of 1 million downloads a month. By the end of March, Solaris 10 downloads had passed though 1 million in total, and the run rate as Sun exited the month was about 500,000 units per month. It is now a month later, and Sun has added another 300,000 downloads and is settling in a pattern that could see Solaris 10 downloads reach 2 million or 2.5 million by January 2006. These numbers are apparently well ahead of Sun's expectations. The Solaris 10 beta program, which launched in October 2003 and ran through the end of December 2004, accounted for 500,000 downloads in about 15 months, or about 34,000 per month. Solaris 8 and Solaris 9 shipments averaged about 73,000 a month. To say that Solaris 10 is doing a lot better is an understatement. The trick now is to monetize that growing installed base.

Sun said this week that it has already seen a spike upward in Solaris training, and that as the Solaris 10 base grows and customers put it into production, it expects to start seeing revenue for support services, which range from $120 to $360 per CPU per year and which is a lot less expensive than Linux, Windows, or other Unixes. How much money might this be? Well, do the math. If Sun manages to get 2.5 million Solaris 10 downloads, and 20 percent of these get put into production with support services on machines that, on average, have two processors and have normal 9x5 business hour support, that works out to about $240 million dollars a year; if customers prefer 24x7 support, which at these rates they can certainly afford, it could be a $350 million a year business. As the base grows and software vendor support expands, Sun might get an even higher conversion rate of free downloads to support contracts. To be a $1 billion business, Solaris 10 support would have to be tied to anywhere from about 1.4 million to 2.1 million servers, the lower number being sufficient if customers opt for the higher-end support services. This seems like a tall order, but there are around 16 million X86 servers out there in the installed base, and we sell another 6 million or so every year. Solaris could eventually get such penetration. And the penetration for X86 servers will probably be a lot higher than the current two-thirds of downloads that Solaris 10 currently has (the other third is for Sparc-based platforms).


In bragging about the Solaris 10 download rate, Sun's chairman and CEO, Scott McNealy, said: "I would not want to be Red Hat right now." Red Hat sold 175,000 support contracts for its Linux implementation in its most recent quarter, and Novell sells considerably fewer than this; it is unknown how many companies download their Linux software and do not pay for support, which you can do thanks to the open source nature of Linux.

Loiacono said that Sun has certified over 1,700 applications from independent software vendors, and that 170 new ISVs who did not have products on the Solaris platform have ported their applications to Solaris 10. One of the most important sets of code that Solaris 10 needs to support is the databases and middleware from Oracle. About 70,000 customers in the world have opted for running Oracle databases on Solaris platforms, and this is probably the biggest portion of the Sun installed base in the data center. (Telcos and service providers run infrastructure workloads on Solaris platforms, or their own databases and applications, and financial services firms use Sparc boxes for number crunching, application serving, and infrastructure workloads, too.) Sun said this week that the Oracle 10g database is certified on Solaris 10 for both Sparc and X86 platforms and the Oracle 10g application server is certified on Sparc boxes and will be certified later this year for X86 and X64 processors from Intel and AMD. The Oracle 10g database was certified on Solaris 9 on both Sparc and X86 platforms back in November 2004.

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Editor: Timothy Prickett Morgan
Contributing Editors: Dan Burger, Joe Hertvik, Kevin Vandever,
Shannon O'Donnell, Victor Rozek, Hesh Wiener, Alex Woodie
Publisher and Advertising Director: Jenny Thomas
Advertising Sales Representative: Kim Reed
Contact the Editors: To contact anyone on the IT Jungle Team
Go to our contacts page and send us a message.


THIS ISSUE
SPONSORED BY:

Arkeia
Open Systems
Stalker Software
Micro Focus
Hewlett-Packard


The Unix Guardian

BACK ISSUES

TABLE OF
CONTENTS
Solaris 10 Tops 1.3 Million Downloads, Gets Oracle 10g Support

Sun Plugs the Grid Some More, Adds Some Features

Sun Expands N1 Systems Management Programs

Sun Puts JES Release 3 Middleware Out and Through the Paces

But Wait, There's More


The Four Hundred
The i5 Tests Well on SAP Data Warehousing Benchmarks

A Bunch of IBM iSeries Announcements

Tools Can Help Manage Change and Diverse Systems

Deloitte Says Outsourcing Doesn't Always Pay

The Linux Beacon
AMD Rolls Out Dual-Core Opterons Early

Server Vendors Gear Up for Dual-Core Opterons

VMware Workstation 5 Adds Features for Team Programming

Sun Puts JES Release 3 Middleware Out and Through the Paces

The Windows Observer
Microsoft Puts X64 Windows to the Dog Food Test

Server Sales Drive Revenue Increase for Microsoft

Dell and Symantec Launch Windows Patch Management Tools

Mad Dog 21/21: The Princess and IP


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