On BNET: Vote: How will Apple blow it?
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

By Andrew Donoghue
Posted on ZDNet News: Jun 29, 2004 7:18:00 PM

Sun Microsystems finally received the seal of approval it has been seeking from a large private sector client for its Java Desktop System, with the announcement Tuesday that the Allied Irish Bank is migrating 7,500 users to the software.

The bank's offices in Ireland, Northern Ireland and mainland Britain will move to JDS during 2005 as part of a wider move to a new branch banking platform. The bank said in a statement that it chose JDS, the server maker's version of Linux for desktop computers, because of its "integrated environment based on open-source components and industry standards."

Over the past 12 months, numerous European public bodies, including the City of Munich, have pledged support for open-source desktop software. But the AIB is one of the largest private companies to adopt it.

"There is lots of activity, as the world is now very excited about alternative open-source-based desktops," Sun CEO Scott McNealy told an audience on Tuesday during a keynote speech at the JavaOne conference in San Francisco.


Get Up to Speed on...
Open source
Get the latest headlines and
company-specific news in our
expanded GUTS section.


Desktop Linux needs the endorsement of a high-profile financial institution such as AIB, a situation that gives that kind of large customer a very strong negotiating position.

Earlier this year, Robin Wilton--Sun's program manager for JDS in Europe, the Middle East and Africa--alluded to a "hard bargain" that an unnamed bank had negotiated with the software maker over a JDS deployment. Wilton's comments, made during a speech at the Linux User and Developer Expo 2004, made it pretty clear that Sun had found the potential bank customer hard to make a deal with.

"I hope they won't be a template for future customers," Wilton said. "Boy, have they put pressure on us for a good price. If all companies are like this, it really will be earning a fiver the hard way."

Wilton said the bank's JDS installation would replace a Microsoft Windows 3.1 suite that the bank was writing off over 10 to 15 years--another indication of the institution's thrifty approach to information technology.

He also hinted that the unnamed bank had stipulated that some of the functionality that Sun has included in JDS to compete with the likes of Windows should be removed, a process Wilton described as "deintegration." "They want us to rip out the instant-messenger client, for example, so they're left with a robust core that needs minimal maintenance," he said.

Sun recently secured a deal with the Chinese government that could see hundreds of millions of PCs running desktop Java, but McNealy has said that this deal won't be a big money-spinner for the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company.

McNealy told an audience at a Sun European user event in Berlin last December that the agreement was a strategic play that stopped Microsoft dominating the lucrative Chinese market.

Andrew Donoghue of ZDNet UK reported from London. CNET News.com's Stephen Shankland contributed to this report.

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 39 Talkback(s)
But do they feel it like that in San Fran
or the march on the govt halls to mandate. (Read the rest)
Posted by: FilledOut Posted on: 06/30/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Glad I don't work there  Enterprise Analyst | 06/29/04
I doubt they would hire you anyhow  Linux User 147560 | 06/29/04
Between you and me  Enterprise Analyst | 06/29/04
You wear a witches outfit?  Linux User 147560 | 06/29/04
No, I believe that to be you  Enterprise Analyst | 06/29/04
Okay lets use logic  Linux User 147560 | 06/29/04
Using logic  Enterprise Analyst | 06/29/04
Exercise in  michael-t | 06/29/04
Personal experience?  B.O.F.H. | 06/29/04
And why is that?  IT_User | 06/29/04
The SEC will be anxious to hear this...  Mike Cox | 06/29/04
Sorry to hear about your credit rating after their IIS server got hacked.  Plain Logic | 06/29/04
You're right, but how did you know?  IT_User | 06/29/04
News-flash  Enterprise Analyst | 06/29/04
This means nothing, no momentum for desktop Linux, this is not real,  DonnieBoy | 06/29/04
Look where it is at  Enterprise Analyst | 06/29/04
Yes, seems like europeans are smarter than the good ol' boys here.  DonnieBoy | 06/29/04
In other words,  Enterprise Analyst | 06/29/04
No, just more secure, and you CAN remove apps you don't use.  DonnieBoy | 06/29/04
Yo, Enterprise Loser . . . Our Linux servers require 80% less patching...  Plain Logic | 06/29/04
Linux! Is this Linux?  IT_User | 06/29/04
re: Linux! Is this Linux?  bgoss@... | 06/29/04
Here's a link  bgoss@... | 06/29/04
Thanks  IT_User | 06/29/04
Ouch, all the split how java and broken windows slinging in here  FilledOut | 06/29/04
Like Dell, Sun, IBM and other  FilledOut | 06/30/04
I am glad I don't work  michael-t | 06/29/04
Glad to live in the USA  Enterprise Analyst | 06/29/04
Re: Glad to live in the USA  issthatso | 06/29/04
Glad we have MS  Enterprise Analyst | 06/29/04
Glad to see MS hires more in India and Russia!  B.O.F.H. | 06/29/04
...and supporting Windows will sure keep lots of them employed...  Plain Logic | 06/29/04
And which software company is making this software?  B.O.F.H. | 06/29/04
As an American living in Europe...  Expatriate US Geek | 06/29/04
American software! That sounds good!  Linux_Developer | 06/30/04
Glad to live in the USA - Home of freedom of choice . . .  Plain Logic | 06/29/04
Time to try to mandate open source again?  FilledOut | 06/30/04
Never  IT_User | 06/30/04
But do they feel it like that in San Fran  FilledOut | 06/30/04

What do you think?

advertisement
advertisement

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

SmartPlanet

Click Here