Ron Chen wrote:
> 
> Sun Grid Engine goes opensource. See SGE home page:
> 
> http://www.sun.com/gridware
> 
> -Ron

http://www.sun.com/smi/Press/sunflash/2001-07/sunflash.20010723.1.html

SUN MICROSYSTEMS MAKES SUN[tm] GRID ENGINE SOFTWARE AVAILABLE TO OPEN SOURCE COMMUNITY

Sun Works with CollabNet to Continue its Strong Support of Open Computing and 
Encourage Adoption of Powerful Grid Computing Model

SAN DIEGO, CA -- O'REILLY OPEN SOURCE CONVENTION -- July 23, 2001 -- Reaffirming its 
commitment to the open source movement, Sun
Microsystems, Inc. (NASDAQ: SUNW) announced today the Sun Grid Engine Project, an 
initiative to offer the source code for Sun[tm]
Grid Engine software to users and the developer community. Sun Grid Engine software is 
an advanced distributed resource management
(DRM) tool. It has been available as a free download at www.sun.com/software/gridware 
since its introduction in September 2000.

A leader in the open source community, Sun will add this project's half million lines 
of code to its total of more than 8 million
lines of code already contributed to open source efforts. Sun is coordinating this 
worldwide project with CollabNet, a leading
provider of collaborative software development solutions based on open source 
concepts, in making the code available for download at
www.gridengine.sunsource.net.

The project is designed to further remove the cost and implementation barriers 
associated with deploying DRM software in a compute
farm. Additionally, both open source users and Sun Grid Engine software customers 
should benefit from this open source project
through enhanced industry support. For example, service and support providers should 
be able to customize the powerful software for
specific customer needs, and software developers should be able to reduce complexity 
for end users by creating applications that are
tightly integrated with Sun Grid Engine software. Over time, the open source effort 
should facilitate the adoption of open standards
for DRM software, facilitating interoperability with applications and easing 
integration.

"As cluster computing scales up towards grid computing, tools like Sun Grid Engine 
software will become ubiquitous and essential,"
said Tim O'Reilly, founder and CEO of technology information firm O'Reilly & 
Associates. "Computing is moving towards the
development of what you might call an Internet operating system. Sun recognizes that 
key components of that operating system
shouldn't be controlled by any one company, and they're putting their money where 
their mouth is by releasing it as open source."

"Sun will continue to deliver products that support our core philosophy that the 
network is the computer," said Robbie Turner, vice
president of Client and Technical Market Products at Sun Microsystems. "Sun is 
encouraging the grid computing model via free
downloads of Sun Grid Engine software--and now by making its code available to the 
open source community--because the productivity
gains of the grid computing model will increasingly serve as a decisive factor in a 
business's ultimate success or failure."

CollabNet is providing the Web infrastructure and comprehensive development platform 
that enables geographically dispersed groups of
developers to collaborate on Grid Engine projects. Based on CollabNet's SourceCast 
environment, this platform includes tools for
revision control, issue tracking, mailing list creation and management, and Web-based 
administration. This open source project
follows on the heels of the successful OpenOffice.org initiative--also supported by 
CollabNet--which made available the source code
for Sun's StarOffice[tm] software under the same industry-accepted Sun Industry 
Standards Source License. Full details of Sun's
involvement with open source projects can be seen at www.sunsource.net.

"The Grid Engine Project continues to demonstrate Sun's true leadership within the 
open source community," said Brian Behlendorf,
co-founder and CTO of CollabNet. "CollabNet is delighted to be working with Sun on yet 
more compelling open source software. Sun's
decision to open this previously proprietary software demonstrates its understanding 
of the technical community's fundamental need
and interest in scalable DRM technology."

Delivering Network-Wide Compute Power to the Desktop

Sun Grid Engine software was introduced in September 2000 as the first product 
resulting from Sun's acquisition of Gridware,
formerly a privately-owned commercial vendor of advanced DRM software tools. Since 
then, the software has been downloaded nearly
8,000 times in more than 90 countries. A comprehensive web-based training course for 
installing and managing the software is also
available at no cost at www.sun.com/software/gridware. By distributing Sun Grid Engine 
software as a free download and with all Sun
systems, Sun is changing the economics of technical computing and breaking down the 
barriers of employing distributed computing.

Sun Grid Engine software is designed to aggregate compute resources, match them to 
individual job requirements, and deliver
network-wide compute power to the desktop. Through this horizontal scaling, Sun's 
powerful DRM tool manages an organization's
compute resources and job distribution, which:

allows engineers to move beyond the desktop to leverage all the resources available on 
the network;
frees the engineer to focus on the project, not computing tasks; provides easy access 
to resource-rich compute environments,
allowing for expanded product development, simulations and testing; 
speeds time to market; 
and fundamentally changes the economics of technical computing. 

About CollabNet

CollabNet provides companies with solutions for collaborative software development by 
combining a comprehensive Web-based
environment and suite of consulting services. CollabNet develops collaborative 
networks that enable companies to share code within
an enterprise, to give select customers and business partners access to code, or to 
open the code to the wider open source
community. These solutions are designed to facilitate software development across 
globally disparate communities and enable
corporations to reduce costs and increase revenues. CollabNet is currently working 
with customers ranging from hardware and software
providers to companies from industries such as finance, wireless, and healthcare.  
Brian Behlendorf, co-founder of the Apache
Software Foundation, established CollabNet in July 1999. For more information, see 
www.collab.net.

About Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision -- "The Network Is The Computer[tm]" -- 
has propelled Sun Microsystems, Inc. (Nasdaq:
SUNW), to its position as a leading provider of industrial-strength hardware, software 
and services that power the Internet and
allow companies worldwide to take their businesses to the nth. With $18.3 billion in 
annual revenues, Sun can be found in more than
170 countries and on the World Wide Web at http://sun.com.

Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun Logo, Sun Grid Engine, StarOffice and The Network Is 
The Computer are trademarks or registered
trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries. 
CollabNet and SourceCast are trademarks of CollabNet,
Inc.

jim
-- 
ET has one helluva sense of humor!
He's always anal-probing right-wing schizos!

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