cloud computing, sticky

McNealy’s Monday Morning Quarterbacking on Solaris and Linux … shows he still doesn’t get it.

Scott “Privacy Is Dead” McNealy told an audience at an event in Silicon Valley that Sun could have won out over Linux if the company had consistently pushed forward Solaris xI86 instead of pussy-footing around.  “Google today would be running on Solaris,” he said.

Um, no.

Solaris was, and is, a great operating system, to be sure. But Linux did not succeed because of Sun’s failure to commit to Intel.  Linux succeeded because of the open-source model, and the ability of IT people all over the world to try it without license restrictions.

If Sun had open-sourced Solaris early, Sun may very well have taken a dent out of Linux’s success. But that’s a big if.  And considering how much internal wrangling, legal finagling and patent-exchanging had to be done to get Solaris open-sourced in the timeframe that it did, even with the somewhat restrictive terms of Sun’s custom-rolled open-source license even though it was a license that split Solaris off to some degree from other open-source communities , it’s doubtful that McNealy would have pulled it off. It wasn’t until 2005 that Sun cleared the legal hurdles to open-source Solaris.

There are so many other “woulda, shoulda, coulda” moments in Sun’s history. McNealy should be acknowledged for his early recognition of the coming of cloud computing — “application dial-tone”, he referred to it as.  But  Sun had multiple opportunities to redefine the market with open-source early, both with Java and Solaris.   The company’s toe-dips with its investments in OpenOffice (via its acquisition of StarOffice), Gnome, mySQL and other open-source projects came after Linux had already become a major threat. And honestly, Sun did those things to put a thumb in Microsoft’s eye.

So, McNealy can look back and replay the game all he wants. But it won’t change the fact that Sun was caught up in Sparc , and failed to leverage Solaris and Java to transition the company toward being an open-source driven software services company that also sells hardware.  And that’s why Larry Ellison owns Sun now.

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Enterprise IT

HHS Takes a Bite out of a HIPAA Violator

Threatpost reports that HHS is finally taking action against at least the most blatant violations of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act’s privacy rules. Sort of:

The health care industry’s toothless tiger finally bared its teeth, as the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services issued a $4.3 m fine to a Maryland health care provider for violations of the HIPAA Privacy Rule. The action is the first monetary fine issued since the Act was passed in 1996.

via HIPAA Bares Its Teeth: $4.3m Fine For Privacy Violation | threatpost.

Perhaps the Obama administration can even further reduce the cost of the healthcare reform laws by really enforcing HIPAA, and using the rules as a revenue generator — like some small towns do with speeding tickets.

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