Sun Microsystems released an update to its
Java-based business application suite with an eye toward winning over
Microsoft and HP
The company said its Sun Java Enterprise System (JES) Release 3 is
now available for purchase at $140 per employee per year. The price
includes unlimited right-to-use and licenses to versions of Sun’s
tools, Sun Java Studio Enterprise and Sun Java Studio Creator, as well
as a Sun Developer Network Standard subscription.
The new version also tosses in the Sun Java System Identity Manager, as well as the long-awaited support for Windows 2000, Windows XP and
HP-UX. Already, JES can run on Solaris 10 and Linux.
The multi-platform support strategy is aimed at yanking the rug out
from under companies like JBoss, Borland and BEA
that sell Java-based software but do not have the
hardware to support it. Either way, Sun is hoping to gain ground on IBM
and BEA, which continue to dominate the Enterprise Java
marketplace.
Also new to Release 3 is Sun Java Studio Enterprise, an analysis,
design and development platform that leans on the Unified Modeling
Language (UML). Other additions to the JES stack include the Sun
N1 Grid Service Provisioning System, which lets administrators configure
and update network services from a Web browser, and Sun Java Studio
Creator, a development tool.
JES is the heart of Sun’s Web services strategy and is central to the company’s subscription-based pricing foray. The software
stack is pre-integrated into the majority of Sun’s hardware and benefits
from a quarterly update release cycle. Formerly known as Sun ONE
middleware and developer products, the core stack includes Portal,
Communication and Collaboration, Network Identity, Application and Web,
Availability and Security services.
Sun said it has 360 corporations, governments and
organizations signed up for JES, which represents about 420,000 people
using the software on an annual subscription basis. The company has
previously hinted at shifting its JES software to an open source model, but now seems
content with keeping the development in-house on a fairly fast-paced
schedule.
“Typically, we are releasing updates to JES twice a year,” Ken
Draknik, a product line manager with Sun’s Java Application Services
Platform, told internetnews.com. “We are already in the process
for Release 4, which should come out in the fall. We are actually
working on longer release cycles because there are all sorts of testing
and quality assurances that need to be in place.”
One of those assurances is the inclusion of the Sun Java System
Identity Manager. The company said adding the previously separate
software into JES allows system administrators to synchronize a user’s
identity with specific services. Sun said the software also cuts out the
need to do manual creation, maintenance and deletion of identity data.
In addition to its $140 license, Sun continues to sell its Java
System
Suites at $50 a pop. Instead of buying the whole JES suite, Sun offers five different market-focused models as a way for customers to focus
on specific topics like identity management, application platform
services, system availability and communications.