Sun Microsystems hired a new software chief on Monday, CNET News.com has learned: Rich Green, the latest in a series of former executives the company has lured back.
Rich Green
The server and software company plans to announce the move on the same day Sun is holding a quarterly product announcement in Washington, D.C., sources familiar with the executive appointment said. Sun and Cassatt confirmed the move.
Green originally started at Sun in 1989 but left in 2004 to become executive vice president of product development at Cassatt, a start-up focusing on managing large groups of servers. He had been leading Java work at Sun as vice president of programming tools.
"It was too compelling to stay away," Green said in an interview Monday, arguing that Sun's open-source software work is making it relevant again. Software is a key part of the company's effort to return to sustained profitability and revenue growth, and its new chief executive, Jonathan Schwartz, rose through the software ranks.
At Sun, Green will choose a small set of focused priorities for the software group's "very large portfolio," Green said. "There are opportunities to say, 'Here are the two or three or four key market initiatives that Sun is going to pursue now and in the next few years.'"
During his tenure at Sun, Green was instrumental in ending a long-running dispute with Microsoft, hammering out a $1.95 billion payment to Sun to settle an antitrust lawsuit and license patents. Now at Sun, he'll oversee a massive attempt to make Sun's software relevant and profitable by making it free and open-source.
Green is one of several returning executives who Sun Chairman Scott McNealy likes to highlight as the company tries to argue that it has its dot-com mojo back.
But at least one Java executive won't be returning to Sun: Rob Gingell, who also left for Cassatt in 2004 and who will replace Green, said Steve Wilson, Cassatt's vice president of product marketing. Gingell was instrumental in building the Java Community Process by which the software technology is jointly governed by Sun and a host of other interested companies.
"We wish Rich nothing but the best," Wilson said. "With all the changes at Sun management, he's got a big opportunity to influence change at one of the biggest companies in the world."
Sun has held out against making Java open-source software, though it has pledged to share everything else, and Java isn't as proprietary as some software. Green declined to comment on the open-source issue.
There are some opportunity costs to keeping Java proprietary, argues Chris Blizzard, manager of Red Hat's desktop group. Among other things, it led to Mono, an open-source version of Microsoft's .Net software, making its way into Linux; to a variety of sometimes incompatible virtual machine software to run Java programs; and the emergence of the open-source LAMP software collection widely used on servers powering Internet sites.
Google creates an animated doodle that features a boy, a girl, Google's search engine, and a jump rope. But might there be darker, more analytical, more troubling interpretations to this tale?
The Silicon Valley online payments startup grew by 1,000 percent last year and is hopeful it can repeat that level of growth this year. To do that, it's had to move away from its early friends-and-family roots and embrace small businesses.
Chamtech's spray-on antenna uses a nano material to provide a low-power boost to antenna range. The wireless-in-a-can product may some day bring an end to unsightly cell towers.
EnerG2 opens a plant to make an engineered carbon that will improve performance of energy storage devices and make storage for start-stop hybrid cars less expensive.
Join the conversation