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Sun Serves up New Pricing Strategy, Products

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Sun Microsystems is focusing on the red-hot Asian Pacific marketplace to make its latest stand against rivals and launch some 30 new hardware and software products, plus per-citizen pricing models.

The company is hoping to bolster sales in its server division and on the desktop with announcements focused on Solaris 10, Java Enterprise System, Java Desktop System, RFID, identity management, services, storage and its N1 utility computing software.

The Santa Clara, Calif.-based network computer maker is scheduled to unveil the announcements Tuesday, June 1, as part of its quarterly update launch party, this time in Shanghai, China. CEO Scott McNealy and other Sun executives are framing their appearance as a discussion of alternatives to ”fixed cost” computing models, as well as using Solaris and Java to deliver network services.

”To fully benefit from this new era in Network Computing, enterprises will need to shift focus away from managing disparate parts of the IT infrastructure,” said Jonathan Schwartz, Sun’s newly-appointed president and COO.

”Servers, software, storage and networking will become increasingly simplified, self-managing and self-healing. They will be reconstituted as services — such as CRM, collaboration tools, Voice over IP and video-on-demand — that will translate into business value and competitive edge.”

Sun’s choice to visit Shanghai for its quarterly update announcements is no accident. The company made serious inroads into China’s government in November with a Java Desktop deal and is hungry for more.

Sun is revealing 16 pre-tested reference architectures, seven of which are tweaked especially for Chinese business models. The company said the plug-in software packages cover topics such as disaster recovery, back up, security, and intrusion detection. After producing two or three a quarter, Sun now has 40 such profiles with execs telling internetnews.com to expect between eight and nine new architectures next quarter.

In general, China remains a hotbed of IT activity. Government statistics released in January 2004 show the country’s Internet user base at 79.5 million putting China behind only the U.S. in the number of Web surfers. The number catapults the country ahead of fellow Asia-Pacific region country Japan, which has 56 million Internet users but below first-ranked U.S., which has 165.75 million Internet users.

Per Citizen Pricing for JES

To prime the pump, Sun announced the second release of its Java Enterprise System 2004Q2 along with a new per-citizen pricing model for federal, state and local governments that averages out to about $0.33 per person. The platform now includes support for Red Hat Enterprise Linux. Similarly, Sun announced half-off pricing for its Java Desktop System through December 2, 2004.

An Ounce of Prevention

One new approach is Sun’s new Preventive Services package for the data center. Taking its cue from the insurance and health care industry, Sun is offering a subscription-based network services delivery model that identifies specific, measurable performance goals and offers financial incentives of up to 20 percent off long-term services subscription costs to customers who achieve and sustain their goals.

New Software to Help Track RFID

One of the hot markets for Sun has been its support for RFID in retail. This time around, Sun is adding its Java System RFID Event Manager; to process and filter information from RFID tags or sensors and its Java System RFID Information Server; to store and query RFID data.

New Identity Management Software

Sun released a trio of new identity software slated for release on July 1. The company said the technology in its Java-based System Identity Manager, System Access Manager and System Directory Server Enterprise Edition will let employees, partners and customers access to the company intranet using any number of methods (wireless phone, PC, etc.), with access only to pre-determined areas.

Sun Solaris: Now With Dynamic Files

Standing firm on its homegrown Unix variant, Sun debuted its new Dynamic File System for Solaris 10. The additions feature a self-healing, self-managing technology with improved scalability for storage.

This article was first published on internetnews.com. To read the full article, click here.

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