Sun Microsystems

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Sun Microsystems will be making some announcements on Wednesday regarding their Cloud offerings. Here at Cloud Avenue, we got a chance to talk to the folks at Sun, in advance, about their announcement and I am going to share it here on this post.

So far Sun has been talking vaguely about their plans to jump into the Cloud bandwagon. Tomorrow, they are going to offer some clarity on some of their plans. Earlier today, Fred Wison wondered if Amazon can dominate the Cloud Infrastructure landscape like Google in Search.

Is it possible that AMZN will come to dominate cloud services in the same way that Google has come to dominate search (or Amazon has come to dominate online retailing)?

Well, I don’t know if Amazon will dominate the space but I am sure that they will have a tough competitor in the name of Sun Microsystems. Yes, Sun is going to release products that competes directly with Amazon S3 and Amazon EC2 services. Their public cloud offering will initially start off with a storage and compute service and they may add more in the future. This service will have general availability sometime in the summer. On the compute service, similar to Amazon EC2, users can run various operating systems like Solaris, Open Solaris, Linux, Windows, etc.. They are touting openness here and any application or service that is set up on top of Sun’s public cloud can be moved to any other provider or, even, private clouds.

Sun is also putting their acquisition of qlayer into good use in their Cloud Computing offerings. They are using the technology they acquired in this case to offer what is called as “Virtual Data Center”. This will allow users to instantly provision and deploy servers to the cloud, scale up or down based on demand and even use the tools to deploy in other public and private clouds.

The other announcement from Sun is the release of an extension for their OpenOffice suite. Openoffice users can now save their documents easily to the cloud. Openoffice had an extension to export documents to Google Apps for some time now. It is not clear if this is the same extension with some repackaging or an entirely new extension with access to other vendors too.

Sun is also planning to release a set of tools that will help developers build applications on top of Sun and other Cloud providers including Amazon. These tools, based on WebDAV model, will help developers build cloud functionalities on their applications, be it productivity suite or accounting suite or any other business tool. This will be released under Creative Commons License.

In my opinion, this is a big move. This is going to offer the much needed competition to Amazon Web Services that has the potential to bring down the price. Sun already owns MySQL and it is just a matter of time before they offer relational databases as a service. If they include the management of “MySQL cloud” into their Virtual Datacenter Application, it will put companies like FathomDB out of business and they could offer Microsoft the much needed competition in the “Relational Database in the Cloud” space.

PS: Developers who want to access their APIs might be able to access it using Project Kenai.

Update:  Perhaps by the time Sun release this offering, it will be all IBM?

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