I'll leave it to other analysts to discuss potential overlap in the areas of hardware, operating systems, and databases. Instead I'll focus on the platforms of greatest interest to content technology people. First, there's the future of Sun's meandering enterprise portal strategy...

Tony Byrne, Contributor

March 20, 2009

2 Min Read

The reports that IBM will buy Sun Microsystems are still just rumors with no confirmation. Might not happen. Still interesting to think about. I'll leave it to other analysts to discuss potential overlap in the areas of hardware, operating systems, and databases. Instead I'll focus on the platforms of greatest interest to content technology people.First, there's the future of Sun's meandering enterprise portal strategy. Early this decade, Sun joined other application server vendors by layering a portal product on top. Sun Portal Server was reasonably popular in academia, but otherwise never really took off, despite more recent efforts to spiff it up and put it into open source. Then Sun announced an intention to come out with its own version of open source portal platform Liferay (which CMS Watch reviews in its portals research). IBM has been amenable to open source, but any commercialized Liferay platform would have to compete with the behemoth IBM WebSphere Portal Server. That's a tough one.

Sun has also been rumored, over the years, to have come close to acquiring a Web CMS or Collaboration vendor. Never happened. Sun has been working on various Social Software modules designed to boost its MySQL franchise, but they haven't been productized. Seems to me that IBM has a better history of bringing skunkworks projects to market, so if the deal goes down, maybe we'll see more Sun's R&D in this area.

Finally, there's the question of Java specs and standards. Sun has been steadily easing its hold over Java; hard to tell what an IBM acquisition would mean here.

I think the most important thing about any acquisition is this: Big Blue is no Borg. At least not on the software side. IBM is a highly diffuse and actually somewhat disorganized vendor that tends to acquire products, then routinely lose track of them. For current Sun licensees, maybe that's not a bad thing.I'll leave it to other analysts to discuss potential overlap in the areas of hardware, operating systems, and databases. Instead I'll focus on the platforms of greatest interest to content technology people. First, there's the future of Sun's meandering enterprise portal strategy...

About the Author(s)

Tony Byrne

Contributor

Tony Byrne is the president of research firm Real Story Group and a 20-year technology industry veteran. In 2001, Tony founded CMS Watch as a vendor-independent analyst firm that evaluates content technologies and publishes research comparing different solutions. Over time, CMS Watch evolved into a multichannel research and advisory organization, spinning off similar product evaluation research in areas such as enterprise collaboration and social software. In 2010, CMS Watch became the Real Story Group, which focuses primarily on research on enterprise collaboration software, SharePoint, and Web content management.

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