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Java News Desk Sun's Jonathan Schwartz Explains "Tough" Q1 Results
"All in all, it was a tough quarter for Sun and our customers"
By: Jeremy Geelan
Oct. 31, 2008 06:45 AM
"All in all, it was a tough quarter for Sun and our customers," wrote Sun CEO Jonathan Schwartz yesterday, in a determined attempt via the blogosphere to pour oil on the troubled waters of Sun's dramatic net loss for its first fiscal quarter of 9 cents a share. Among other things he confirmed that Java not only makes money for Sun but is "among the most profitable technology products at Sun." "At a corporate level in Q1, [our] revenue was down 7% year over year. Growth in our emerging products was more than offset by declines in our traditional, high end products. We were surprised by the magnitude of the decline, which reflected a dramatic slowing in the US and Europe, and the effects the credit crisis is having on our customers - across nearly all geographies and industries, but clearly concentrated among financial services companies." Schwartz remained defiantly confident in his overall strategy for the company: "[N]o matter the downturn, we remain exceptionally focused and committed to traditional enterprise computing. The expansion of scale out computing doesn't negate scale up computing - if anything, it leads to even greater demand, over time. IBM was right, mainframes will always be sexy (especially when they run Solaris :)." But he also took the opportunity to answer and answer two of the recurring questions: how does Sun make money off software when it has open sourced everything in its portfolio, and - specifically - how on earth does it make money off Java? "Now, how is Software growing if you give everything away? Schwartz took time out to reaffirm his belief in the importance of technology: "[F]or discovering drugs, running businesses, modeling supply chains and automating business processes, technology's not getting less important, it's getting more important," he declared, adding: "Even if budgets are tight in the near term." "Stay tuned for our newest storage announcements on November 10th... just as the popping of the internet bubble let loose a flood of innovation for the server world, the global credit crisis is about to shake up the storage industry, too."
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