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Features McNealy: "Sun Is Not Proprietary, Just As IBM Is Not Bankrupt"
"To call Sun proprietary is as big a lie as you could put in your newspaper"
By: Jeremy Geelan
Oct. 20, 2004 12:00 AM
If anyone for a moment thinks Scott McNealy is going to take some kind of back seat in the public eye now that Sun has go-to president and COO Jonathan Schwartz dealing with the press and analysts on a seemingly equal footing with his boss, they are wrong. McNealy is still as combative as ever, as he proved when talking to the San Jose Mercury News this week. Asked about the $174 million loss Sun reported in the most recent quarter, McNealy countered with the simple ten-word riposte: "Where's the beef? We made money in the June quarter." But he saved his best shot at the poor reporter when asked whether there was any truth in the perception that "Sun is trying to lock in customers with proprietary technology." Here is McNealy's fusillade in reply:
Asked about Sun's current share price, McNealy was equally unrepentant. "What do you think is a reasonable stock price for Sun?" he replied. "Does $4.20 seem unreasonable?"
When asked by JDJ at the beginning of the year where i-Technology was going in 2004, McNealy predicted:
Ten months on, McNealy's view of the economy is somewhat more opaque. "I saw the report on what is happening to IT jobs around here," he told the Mercury News reporter. "You haven't seen anything yet." Then followed an explanation which centered on the notion of "disruptive technology":
The concern that Sun's June-quarter profit, the first for quite a while, was only possible because of Sun's lucrative $1.6 billion cash payment from Microsoft to settle the antitrust and patent litigation between the two companies, was another issue that brought the wrath of McNealy down on the head of the San Jose-based reporter. Of the $1.6 billion he said: "That was a full cash write-on. Give me for credit for that. I just had a write-on instead of a write-off, cash in the bank, and everybody discounts that." During a conference call to discuss the September quarter's results, McNealy had been in a characteristically upbeat mood, saying: "The team worked really hard and executed on what is usually our toughest quarter." McNealy, Schwartz and his team said they plan to be very aggressive with Sun's new line of Opteron servers and are hoping that the continued rollout of UltraSPARC IV processors across the SunFire server line and the upcoming release of the Solaris 10 operating system, due out by year end, will strengthen the company's performance moving forward. The main thing McNealy stressed was that that Sun's revenue had increased for
the quarter - to $2.63 billion from $2.54 billion for the same quarter a year
ago. Useful, in a quarter that included Sun's payment of $82 million to settle its
long-running patent dispute with Eastman Kodak. Reader Feedback: Page 1 of 1
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