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April 20th, 2009

Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense

Posted by Dana Gardner @ 6:07 am

Categories: BI, Cisco, Developer Tools, Enterprise Java, HP, Hardware Infrastructure, IBM, Java, Linux, Microsoft, Open Source, Oracle, Red Hat, SAP, SOA, SOA Governance, SOA architect, Silicon Valley, Software Development, Software Infrastructure, business intelligence, convergence, database, datacenters, management

Tags: Acquisition, Hewlett-Packard Co., Oracle Corp., Sun Microsystems Inc., IBM Corp., Mergers & Acquisitions, Corporate Law, Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA), Programming Languages, Java

The reported acquisition of Sun Microsystems by Oracle today makes a ton more sense than IBM’s earlier failed bid. This new compact, if it succeeds, will bring as good an end to an independent Sun as the pioneering (yet long flagging) IT vendor could have hoped for at this sorry stage in its history.

But there are much larger implications in Oracle’s latest super-grab than Sun’s demise and assimilation. Among them is the fact that IBM now — for the first time, really — has a true, full and global counter weight to its role and influence. Oracle plus Sun aligned with Hewlett-Packard (which I fully expect) meets and begins to beat IBM at all the important full-service IT games.

This is truly healthy for IT and the global IT marketplace. IBM’s earlier purported bid for Sun always smelled bad to me. I was, it turned out, mostly a red herring. Perhaps Oracle needed the IBM roller coaster ride to focus its intentions. Nonetheless, the outcome is optimal. It bodes well for cloud computing too, as Oracle just about overnight becomes a cloud force to reckon with. I always thought Larry Ellison was just biding time on this one. The recession has hastened the timetable.

Other than IBM’s unassailed hegemony, the other losers in this are Microsoft (actually possibly creeping to irrelevancy faster than anyone could have imagined three years ago), SAP, and Cisco Systems. Amazon may also get getting more competition soon on the platform as a service front. Using Sun’s cloud investments, implementations and plans, Ellison can also quickly forge together his own counter-weight to Salesforce.com. No need to buy it now (for a while).

Open source in general, too, may take a hit, as I don’t expect Unbreakable Linux to remain Oracle’s point on the operating system arrow. Solaris will be the prime Oracle OS for performance, meaning Oracle’s channel pipeline to Red Hat will shrink. And MySQL will be a means and not an ends for Oracle, which would, of course, prefer an Oracle 11g cloud instead.

Suffice to say that whatever momentum Sun had behind open source everywhere will be muted to open source some times as a ramp to other Oracle stuff, or to grow the community and keep developers happy. If nothing else, Oracle has been pragmatic on open source, not religious.

Like IBM, Oracle will have little interest or need for open source middleware or service oriented architecture (SOA) components. Further, given Oracle’s early and deep interest in Eclipse and OSGi, the Java tools will stay free and open (with a lot of Oracle wizards embedded across the database and other middleware). The tussle for influence between Oracle and IBM in Eclipse and the Java Community Process (JCP) will be great fun to watch in coming years. Again, this is healthy. (Good thing Sun opened this up, eh?)

No other company has shown an ability to merge and integrate at the massive scale and complexity that Oracle has. It’s acquisition spree that began five years ago is unprecedented in its scope and level of success. We have no reason to suspect that the way it handles Sun will be any different.

[Update: Not everyone is as sanguine on the deal as I am. TIBCO Software's CEO Vivek Ranadive, in an interview on BriefingsDirect with Rich Seeley, states his concerns.]

Winners on the deal include Java itself in the fullest and broadest sense. Oracle and IBM are the premier Java vendors, and the might of IBM (and its customers and developers) in the market will force Oracle to keep Java open and vibrant, while Oracle’s penchant for control and commercial success will keep Java safe and singular. I expect the old BEA WebLogic implementations now at Oracle to gather some minor bundles from Sun’s software portfolio, but Sun’s enterprise software stack (for all intents and purposes) is history. I can’t see Glass Fish or Net Beans going anywhere but bye-bye. Same with the Sun SOA stuff.

Most interesting will be the way that Oracle matches the Sun assets against HP’s burgeoning partnership with Oracle. Will HP perhaps buy Sun’s hardware, storage and integrated cicuits intellectual property outright after the Oracle acquisition is final? I’d bet on it. [Disclosure: HP is a sponsor of BriefingsDIrect podcasts.]

The Exadata announcement last fall is a good example of what to expect. Business intelligence is the killer enterprise application of the day (era), and Oracle and HP aim to win. Coupling Oracle BI and business applications is something special … better potentially than what IBM and SAP can do. Should we expect from this Oracle-Sun merger some more love or more between IBM and SAP. Oh, ya!

We should expect to see a major go-to-market push by HP and Oracle, with all kinds of appliances and solutions portfolios. Both Oracle’s and HP’s love of virtualization allows all kinds of neat packaging. Expect some of the industry’s premier on-premises cloud solutions ASAP.

Indeed, we now have a land grab race for the modernized data center/private cloud between Oracle/Sun/HP and IBM. What’s more, HP with all the old DEC stuff, plus Sun’s Unix, may keep Unix alive and well while keeping IBM at bay with its everything mainframe lust.

On the blue sky front, consider if Apple and Google get closer to the Oracle-Sun-HP trifecta? Wow. Cloud city.

Larry Ellison correctly predicted a few years ago that only a few IT companies would remain. Maybe we should just remove the “IT” and keep it at only a few companies will remain — and Oracle will be one of them.

Talk about pure irony … It was when Oracle turned its back on Sun four years ago with the unbreakable Linux and Java process business (Eclipse over NetBeans, OSGi support, etc.) that Sun’s nosedive deepened. In a sense, you could say that Oracle pushed Sun off a cliff in slow motion, only to catch the pieces at fire sale prices.

Dana GardnerDana Gardner is principal analyst of Interarbor Solutions. For disclosures on Dana's industry affiliations, click here or to view his full profile click here.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 33 Talkback(s)
RE: Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense
So many similar products in one stable will only create chaos and confusion. Oracle is not a software company it?s a bazaar.
If Microsoft can get their act together this can be their second life.

... (Read the rest)
Posted by: antmarket Posted on: 04/22/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
You said ...  Linux_4u! | 04/20/09
What point is there in that?  Archkittens | 04/20/09
RE: Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense  scotartt | 04/20/09
Open source only  gardner.dana@... | 04/20/09
Great stuff, Dana  Eleutherios | 04/20/09
RE: Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense  gary859 | 04/20/09
Bye perhaps MySQL  timiteh | 04/20/09
Wrong....  linux for me | 04/20/09
RE: Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense  curmudgeon1 | 04/20/09
Not dead ...  gardner.dana@... | 04/20/09
How do you know?  Maarek Stele | 04/20/09
MySQL will stay open  craigg4c | 04/20/09
Oracle already has a formidable weapon against MS SQL  daftkey | 04/20/09
Sun certifications  curmudgeon1 | 04/20/09
Microsoft: what is their next step?  lalogos | 04/20/09
Closer Partnership  Eleutherios | 04/20/09
IBM Microsoft  randomnoise | 04/20/09
Really? I'm mean seriously?  NWFDiver | 04/20/09
If i got one dollar each time i heard some thing like that:  timiteh | 04/20/09
Oracle is actually very closely tied to Java  daftkey | 04/20/09
Java, Legacy?  Eleutherios | 04/20/09
Java Is Legacy  NWFDiver | 04/20/09
RE: Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense  Thunderbuck | 04/20/09
RE: Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense  craigg4c | 04/20/09
Just because Oracle  wjarvis@... | 04/20/09
Sun and Oracle  The Management consultant | 04/20/09
Java is a piece of ****  Phil Spector | 04/20/09
As is every other computer language...  zkiwi | 04/20/09
Main target seems to be Open Source!  parisfromathens | 04/21/09
RE: Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense  ravi@... | 04/21/09
RE: Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense  zdnetnme | 04/21/09
RE: Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense  antmarket | 04/22/09
RE: Hooray! Oracle acquisition of Sun makes perfect sense  antmarket | 04/22/09

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