John Loiacono, Sun Microsystems' executive vice president for software, is leaving the company to join Adobe Systems as senior vice president of its Creative Solutions Group, CNET News.com has learned.
Sun confirmed the departure on Thursday and said Loiacono's last day will be March 24. Until a replacement is found, President Jonathan Schwartz--who held Sun's software chief role before Loiacono--will take over the job.
"We thank John for his many contributions to Sun and wish him well in his new endeavor," the company said in a statement.
Adobe, headquartered not far from Sun in San Jose, Calif., is a graphics software powerhouse that sells popular titles such as PhotoShop and that acquired rival Macromedia in 2005.
Loiacono will oversee design products such as the Creative Suite, Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere, InDesign and Macromedia Dreamweaver, Adobe said in a statement. He will report to Adobe President Shantanu Narayen.
Loiacono, who took over as software head in 2004, oversaw radical changes that aimed to bring greater success to software produced by the Santa Clara, Calif.-based company. Sun's server software business never produced products that achieved the popularity of rival offerings from IBM and BEA Systems, and its Solaris operating system lost market share to Linux.
"I'm looking forward to having some fun inside of software," said Ulander, reached by phone as he was snowboarding in Idaho. "I think everything Sun is doing with open source is pretty exciting."
MontaVista is searching for a new chief executive, and Ulander said it's likely that person will want to name his own vice president of marketing. "Being a vice president at MontaVista was a great experience, but this is a bigger opportunity," Ulander said.
Sun has made some great progress with Open Office (www.openoffice.org) and NetBeans (www.netbeans.org) but they still don't ship a popular app server according to most analysts.
Most companies appear to use WebSphere (IBM), WebLogic (BEA), JBOSS (www.jboss.org) and others. It has to be an embarrassment to the creator of Java and custodian of the J2EE specs that it doesn't sell (service?) a large slice of the app server market. I see that project GlassFish (<a class="jive-link-external" href="http://java.sun.com/javaee/glassfish/" target="_newWindow">http://java.sun.com/javaee/glassfish/</a>) is a great driver of innovation to Sun's Java System App Server, but will it beat IBM's WebSphere? Maybe the next guy can make it happen?
I think Sun needs to do a good job on that front. From what I have heard, Glassfish is a comelling product when compared to other open source projects in terms of completeness and ease of use. There are builds available for every popular OSes including the MacOsX. One would think that with free software and open source and all, with a super system such as Niagara, and Solaris 10 this is an ideal recipe for success. It only needs good execution, which has been a challenge for Sun. Perhaps Cnet could publish some stories or interviews on how well glassfish is progressing.
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Most companies appear to use WebSphere (IBM), WebLogic (BEA), JBOSS (www.jboss.org) and others. It has to be an embarrassment to the creator of Java and custodian of the J2EE specs that it doesn't sell (service?) a large slice of the app server market. I see that project GlassFish (<a class="jive-link-external" href="http://java.sun.com/javaee/glassfish/" target="_newWindow">http://java.sun.com/javaee/glassfish/</a>) is a great driver of innovation to Sun's Java System App Server, but will it beat IBM's WebSphere? Maybe the next guy can make it happen?
Perhaps Cnet could publish some stories or interviews on how well glassfish is progressing.