Sun hopes for Linux-like Solaris
Through Project Indiana, Sun wants to give Solaris a Linux feel to try to woo an influential developer crowd.
Through Project Indiana, Sun wants to give Solaris a Linux feel to try to woo an influential developer crowd.
Netscape pioneer Marc Andreessen says the scripting language is better, simpler, and has a brighter future than Java.
Sun's CTO says software innovation will start to dominate within services that customers access from the Internet.
Rule that encouraged madcap expansion in the dot-com era turns out to have been, um, way too generous, scientists argue.
OpsWare and CoroSoft, two companies that sell software designed to ease the operation of "data centers" packed with computers, are expanding their support for Linux.
The software group has been losing its independence, with Sun gradually moving iPlanet functions within the rest of Sun, and AOL Time Warner's influence waning.