After months of hinting about its intentions, Sun on Wednesday confirmed that it intends to release source code from its Solaris operating system under an open-source license.After months of hinting about its intentions, Sun on Wednesday confirmed that it intends to release source code from its Solaris operating system under an open-source license.Sun spokesman Russ Castronovo confirmed that an open-source Solaris is in the works, but he declined to reveal any significant details about the project including what software license Sun would be using, whether all of the components of the operating system would be open-sourced and when, exactly, Sun intended to release an open-source Solaris.“At this time it’s in the development phase,” said Castronovo. “We’re in the thinking-about-it stage, and looking at details,” he said. “The are a million details to work out.” The debate over whether or not to open-source Solaris has been a contentious one, according to sources within Sun. As recently as Tuesday, Sun CEO Scott McNealy was claiming that it would make little sense for Sun to freely release such a valuable asset.But Sun has, in fact, released a number of open-source software products to date, including the OpenOffice productivity suite, components of the Gnome desktop, and the Tomcat servlet container. However, the company has, until now, declined to release its most important software assets — Solaris and the Java platform — under an open-source license. While the central kernel of the Solaris operating system includes some interesting technology, an open-source Solaris will need to materialize within the next few months if it is to be of any interest to developers, said Eric Raymond, founder of the Open Source Initiative, a nonprofit corporation created to help companies develop open-source software licenses. “If they don’t get this done within six months, it’s not going to matter at all because Linux is advancing too fast,” he said.Sun has lost a significant portion of its business to Linux servers running on inexpensive Intel-based systems. Linux server shipments grew by 57% year-over-year in the first quarter of 2004, while sales of Unix servers declined by 3% during that time, according to industry research firm IDC.The fact that Sun is now planning to open-source Solaris is somewhat ironic, Raymond said. “It is a matter of record that Linux was written because Solaris was too expensive and was closed-source,” he said. “If they had open-sourced it in 1990 or sooner, Linux would never have happened.” Related content news analysis Western Digital keeps HDDs relevant with major capacity boost Western Digital and rival Seagate are finding new ways to pack data onto disk platters, keeping them relevant in the age of solid-state drives (SSD). By Andy Patrizio Dec 06, 2023 4 mins Enterprise Storage Data Center news analysis Global network outage report and internet health check Cisco subsidiary ThousandEyes, which tracks internet and cloud traffic, provides Network World with weekly updates on the performance of ISPs, cloud service providers, and UCaaS providers. By Ann Bednarz and Tim Greene Dec 06, 2023 286 mins Networking news analysis Cisco uncorks AI-based security assistant to streamline enterprise protection With Cisco AI Assistant for Security, enterprises can use natural language to discover policies and get rule recommendations, identify misconfigured policies, and simplify complex workflows. By Michael Cooney Dec 06, 2023 3 mins Firewalls Generative AI Network Security news Nvidia’s new chips for China to be compliant with US curbs: Jensen Huang Nvidia’s AI-focused H20 GPUs bypass US restrictions on China’s silicon access, including limits on-chip performance and density. By Anirban Ghoshal Dec 06, 2023 3 mins CPUs and Processors Technology Industry Podcasts Videos Resources Events NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe