Home

New Tech Heroes

New Media and Social Publishing

Navigation

  • Home
  • About
    • Site rules
    • Privacy policy
    • Contact
    • About Tom Kephart
Home

Thought provoking

  • 6 Tech Topics We Should All Definitely Stop Talking About
  • Marketing Your Blog With Squidoo
  • Replacing the article
  • When you stand for something
  • Corporate Blogger: Angel or Demon?
more

Tag cloud

Adobe AIR amateurs Apple blog blogger blogging blogs browsers buyout CMS content management development Drupal Facebook Firefox flashback friendfeed funny Gmail Google history Internet Internet Explorer jobs Joomla Mahalo Microsoft new media offline online Open Source patch Plone privacy radio reputation Safari Scoble security SEO SharePoint SilverStripe social social networking social publishing spam TechCrunch television Tom Kephart upgrade venture capital video virtual conversation Vista vulnerability web WordPress XP Yahoo

Jonathan Schwartz

MySQL ties the knot with Sun

Submitted by Tom Kephart on Tue, 02/26/2008 - 4:43pm.
  • acquisition
  • database
  • Jonathan Schwartz
  • MySQL
  • Open Source
  • Sun

The acquisition of open source database software MySQL by Sun was completed today, consummating a whirlwind courtship that started only last November. Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz says on his blog that Sun will immediately begin promoting MySQL to extend its reach and rolling out global enterprise support programs. In short, "we're bringing our largest customers the innovation and performance the world's most important on-line companies [meaning: Google, Yahoo and others, who use MySQL] are already experiencing...."

Schwartz slips into some buzzspeak a bit later, saying that Sun's engineering community, which now includes MySQL, of course, has "begun to engage across a dizzying array of touchpoints." I'm not sure what that means; I confess I'm a little dizzy thinking about it.

His comments about the business model for open source were instructive, however. Noting that many critics of Sun's $1 billion payout to obtain MySQL still consider open source to be something for hobbyists, "[m]ost of the IT world knows quite the opposite." Sun's current approach appears to be speeding adoption of products by removing licensing and pricing barriers, while concentrating on providing support services to add value and generate income. A similar approach is used by businesses that use open source software as a base, adding value through support, training and custom development for clients who have neither the time, training or desire to do so themselves.

While the Sun-MySQL deal has generated many positive comments, there are others who suspect ulterior motives from Sun, worrying that they will lock MySQL away behind a restrictive (and expensive) license, or worse, kill it entirely. Could happen, but Schwartz's actions since becoming CEO have tended toward moving Sun's existing technologies, like Java, to open source, not the other way around. Provided it gets the support Schwartz is promising today in the blush of romance, MySQL looks to be in a good position for the future.

Bookmark/Search this post with:
  • Delicious
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Magnoliacom
  • Newsvine
  • Google
  • Technorati
  • Icerocket
  • Add a comment

New Tech Heroes

Editor: Tom Kephart

Grab the RSS feed
or subscribe by email

Add to Technorati Favorites

View Tom Kephart's profile on LinkedIn

Popular content

Today's:

  • Drupal issues maintenance upgrade to 5.7
  • "A-List" bloggers wet themselves; blogosphere freaks; still no Jesus sighting
  • Acquia's Carbon: commercially supported Drupal

All time:

  • JavaScript vulnerability in Drupal prompts 6.1 release
  • Drupal issues maintenance upgrade to 5.7
  • Scoble cries; blogosphere freaks; Jesus returns

Blogroll

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License.

© 2008 Kephart & Associates, Marine City, Michigan. Our privacy policy.
Powered by Drupal. Customized theme based on Tapestry by RoopleTheme.
Web hosting by pair Networks.

Kephart & Associates