On the Record: Scott McNealy 335
Sequoia writes "There's a worthwhile interview with Sun CEO Scott McNealy at sfgate. I've always had a hard time seeing how Sun has any long-term staying power. I'm still skeptical, but I was able read why Scott thinks he can be successful, 'execution.' He sounds like a hitman! Like any good hitman, Scott seems uncomfortable with his feelings, or at least he doesn't want to talk about them. 'First of all, I don't get paid to feel.' Sure you do, dude. The best decisions come from the integration of feeling and thought. If feelings don't matter, you can by replaced by a computer. He does a beautiful job putting Dell in his place. 'Michael Dell is the greatest spare parts distributor out there. He'll get you a piston ring or a carburetor or a crank shaft at a really low cost.' But, uhhh, isn't that execution? Scott's international perspective is a breath of fresh air. 'Yes. So global companies grow globally. Shouldn't India be a little upset that we have most of their software programmers here?' Heh."
What the hell... (Score:4, Insightful)
scott mcnealy (Score:4, Insightful)
"
A: To what kind?
Q: Industry standards.
A: What does industry standard mean? Define industry standard.
"
No wonder the other three founders are all gone.
Worst. Story. Ever. (Score:2, Insightful)
Who's the poster anyway? (Score:5, Insightful)
Executing on a business plan is called execution. It's a standard business expression, although a tad dot-commish. No need for retarded hitmen analogies
Parent is not a troll (Score:4, Insightful)
well, I read the whole article (Score:5, Insightful)
He sounds a little defensive, but that's understandable. He's been beat up over the last couple of years. Everyone's saying no-one needs Sun and it's a dinosaur. "All the talented people are leaving the company".
But they have over $5 billion in the bank and their line-up is really second to none. Dell can't match their highly tailored line-up. They've got a killer community in java and tons of other stuff coming out.
Sun's still useful for some things, and they got cash to burn. They have a marketplace and they have a line-up. What more do you want?
What Sun forgets (Score:1, Insightful)
The Indian Brain Drain. (Score:5, Insightful)
The Indian government has been concerned about the "brain drain" since 1990 or so. Atleast that's around the time they started acknowledging the fact that it was a serious problem.
The government puts in a lot of money into the Indian Institutes of Technology and the Regional Engineering Colleges. Tuition fees and on-campus living expenses are greatly subsidized for students who are admitted to these colleges based on national-level exams (like the IIT-JEE believed to be the toughest [educationtimes.com] exam at it's level in the world).
A large percentage of graduates from these colleges look for higher salaries and better jobs outside of India: in the US and Europe or Asia, and given the huge amount of resources that the government (and tax payers) pumped into their education, it naturally gets the jitters when students choose to work abroad.
The Indian government has lately taken to giving pep talks in colleges, in addition to distributing booklets explaning the effect of brain drain on the local economy.
I think brain-drain is essentially an outcome of globalization. Technology, irrespective of where it is developed benefits the world as a whole.
Dell's Spare Parts (Score:2, Insightful)
Sun won't die. (Score:5, Insightful)
In fact, Sun and IBM might become a whole lot more similar in the years to come.
Currently they're both companies that have a lot of proprietary mid/high-end server and mainframe equipment out in the field with specialized engineers ready to maintain them. They both have a very large internal focus on research and information management (Sun has its own 'SunLibrary', Google for more information), and both are renowned for developing new technologies which are then "stolen" or "borrowed" by other companies.
Sun and IBM also do a lot of research and provide a lot to disciplines that run alongside their product line. For example, Sun did a lot of work with usability (that's where Jakob Nielsen came from), whereas IBM has done a lot of work on information retrieval and search engines (Google for 'ibm web fountain' [google.com]).
Even if Sun's main market dries up, replaced by Apple XServes and Linux clusters, this will be no more devastating to them as IBM losing out in the x86 market in the late 80's and early 90's.
Sun has a lot of brainpower, a lot of money, and partnerships (Oracle is the latest) to ensure that they'll continue for many years as a research and technology company, if not as a "consumer facing" company.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:scott mcnealy (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, he was a bit defensive in the interview, but then again, which CEO wouldn't be? Did you expect him to say "Sorry, I realize we're fucked in the post-bubble economy"?
$5.7 billion in reserves is a good buffe, for them to change their strategy and get out of the funk.
Replaced by computer (Score:3, Insightful)
H1-Bs unecessary. (Score:4, Insightful)
Here's the problem. Programmer makes 80K a year. Boss thinks, "gee, I can hire a guest worker for 50K a year instead". So. Boss gets 30K more a year, guest workter gets $50K a year. And American
looses his job. Yes. World is technicly better off. But American workers are NOT better off. What's worse, the American worker paid for the road that that the foreign worker now drives to work and pays for the school that the foreign workers kids now go to. By the way, we're cutting back on Advanced Placement classes for more spending on English as a second language.
Few would say we need to cut out immigration all together; but the growth of immigration is out of control. Some people should be allowed in. But to massively expand the H1-B program just because the richest people in American want to pay less in wages in crazy. The few who do come in should have full rights as workers, including the right to change jobs easily, be on a citizship track and not be forced to pay lawyers lots of money to fill out complex paperwork.
You mention the Indian government's relationship to it's students. Yup, most are subsidized by the
government. Most Americans have student debt up to their eyeballs. It costs a lot of money to live in Silicon Valley. American workers deserve fair compenstation and not be targeted by special laws like the H1-B program.
Leave the stinking rant out of the article (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:H1-Bs unecessary. (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Sun won't die. (Score:1, Insightful)
Good point. But have you ever thought why IBM didnt die ? as one IBM Vice president(sorry cant point a link now) had put it "they had almost run out of business". But then they realised the problems and made revolutionary changes in their business strategy and revamped the company. Foremost being the adoption of linux and opensource. In other words, they could read the writings on the wall. On the contray, SUN couldnt not do that. They didnt realise the strength of open source movement and its flagship product, Linux. In fact , sun became success when they emraced first generation of "open source" movement , i.e TCP/IP, internet and other open standards(where IBM had failed) . But they failed miserably to do the follow up and embrace the second generation of open source movement, which is Linux and Free softwares. And IBM on the other hand jumped in and joined the band wagon. Untill and unless SUN makes radical changes again in their business strategy, they are going to be the next DEC. Everyone will have greate words about them but still dead.
McNealy says that SPARC is #1 computing architect. (Score:5, Insightful)
Perhaps, McNealy is referring to #1 in the sense of #1 performance. Again, the #1 in performance is the triad: Power architecture (with implementations being Power4, Power4+, Power5), the Itanium architecture (with implementations being Itanium 2, 3, etc.), and the x86 architecture (with implementations being the Pentium 4, etc.). A quick review of the performance stats at SPEC [spec.org] should clarify any confusion. The SPARC is among the worst processors in terms of performance.
Below is the second key quote.
Compared to IBM, Sun is #1 -- in the sense that Sun has more H-1B employees. IBM, as a matter of corporate policy, refuses to hire any H-1B workers unless they are applying for a job that requires a Ph.D. The Power4, which handily beats the UltraSPARC III in performance, was built almost exclusively by American citizens or permanent residents. No H-1Bs.
Perhaps, McNealy was referring to the number of H-1Bs when he was talking about the SPARC being the supposed #1 computing architecture.
Scott McNealy thinks the SCO case still has merit? (Score:2, Insightful)
This quote sounds like it came from an employee of SCO--not Sun! Is this not a restatement of Darl McBride's rip on IBM and all other GNU/Linux resellers/distributors? I thought Sun still contributing to GNOME and shipping some system running Linux--thus themselves being a GNU/Linux distributor. And if they aren't paying royalties then why has SCO praised Sun for doing so?
I thought the majority of the "new desktop" is based around GNOME? Why is it that McNealy seems to be putting down the GNU/Linux community and then praising results from the community all in the same breath?
Re:sun (Score:1, Insightful)
Nice comment, asshat. I like the way you lack anything to back it up. Nevermind that some people have been saying this for 20 years now...
Re:scott mcnealy (Score:3, Insightful)
This guy is amazing (Score:4, Insightful)
Simply amazing. Get REAL, Scott, come up with a valid VIABLE business plan and execute on it. With cheap mainstream 64 bit computing around the corner you gotta do better than you do these days and sell your crap at competitive prices.
Re:The Indian Brain Drain. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:The Indian Brain Drain. (Score:3, Insightful)
> willing to work for less then maybe you need to evaluate your true worth
That would be true if it were a mostly level playing field. The fact is you're competing against a workforce on a payscale an order of magnitude lower than yours. There's no acceptable salary adjustment that can make this work. The lowest a single person in the US can earn and just barely scrape by is around $20K a year, and certainly not in all parts of the country. This is more than twice the going rate of a programmer in India, living a good life by local standards.
What it comes down to is that while the goals of a global market and workforce are certainly laudable, until living standards are equalized across the globe this mostly benefits the global players that can produce low and sell high. It doesn't even benefit those Indian workers to the extent you might believe, because not all goods have the same relative pricing as food and shelter. At $6K/yr he might eat and sleep well, but he still won't be buying fancy computers or drive expensive cars.
Re:BIGGEST joke is on McNealy. (Score:1, Insightful)
Why should they? If it makes you feel any better, they don't give a hoot about their Indian employees either.
you can't trust the guy (Score:5, Insightful)
That means, among other things, taking advantage of the SCO situation by telling people to buy Linux or Solaris from Sun so that they can't get sued by SCO.
And you can see his current thinking in this quote: Note the "we have", as in "Sun has". The guy obviously views Sun's ownership of Java as analogous to Microsoft's ownership of
Linux or POSIX don't even enter into his thinking as platforms. He already thinks of the Linux and POSIX APIs as being irrelevant, supplanted by Java APIs, APIs that, by his own statement, Sun effectively owns.
At least with Gates, people know exactly where he stands. McNealy is dangerous because some people actually believe his talk of openness and support of free software. But make no mistake: if it would help his business, the guy would clearly not hesitate a second to kill Linux or grab control of it. And that's just what he is trying to do, both with Java and with his SCO-related efforts.
Re:What's a product? What's a solution? (Score:4, Insightful)
A head of lettuce: definitely a product. Not very useful to the customer until they combine and customize it with other products.
A ready-made salad in a clamshell dish with a plastic fork, plastic knife, napkin, and a pack of dressing: a lunch solution.
Some people go for the solution (especially when it comes from a restaurant rather than a grocery store); some people compose their own solutions from grocery store products.
Flour and yeast: products. Sliced bread: a solution. In this case, most people go for the turnkey "solution" most of the time.
Actually, "product" and "solution" are just crude categories here; there's actually a continuous scale from "grow the grain yourself" to "hot pizza $2 per slice".
But damn
Me, I'm happy to buy turnkey desktop and laptop computers, and then slap a turnkey Linux distro on them and start doing things.
There's nothing inherently good or bad about products versus solutions; it depends on the specifics of the products and the desires of the customers.
In other fields:
CD's and MP3's: very turnkey solution.
Sheet music and guitar tabs: nice raw product.
ftp.gnu.org: many fine products that do fine things
Debian CD: a solution for your personal computing needs
One interesting thing about open source is that there are legions of volunteer programmers working on products, and a complementary spectrum of for-profit companies (plus a few not-for-profit groups like Debian) offering solutions based on those products, and they are working out novel arrangements for mutual co-operation.
Re:What Linus said sometime ago (Score:2, Insightful)
Experience with H1-B's? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is a wonderfully naive point of view that seems to be very common on Slashdot. While it might be true in some industries, it makes me think you don't have much experience with H1-B's at the higher levels of the tech industry. So I'm going on a rant....
<rant>
I was a manager at IBM for a couple of years, and in that time I think I hired two or three people on H1-B visas and helped one or two more apply for green cards. (With some overlap between the sets.) This was out of a group of abut a dozen people, so maybe a third of my team was on some sort of visa. The reasons had nothing to do with saving money or time. Instead, the reason was simple: a talent shortage.
My group and the others at our site were feeding off the top of the programmer food chain, to borrow an analogy. We needed engineers who knew the ins and outs of Java and/or C++, had a good grasp of OOD, and were able to figure out the details of standards documents and implement them, or even to help write them in the first place. Just as important, we needed people who were smart and could learn new technologies and languages quickly.
People like this were very hard to find at the height of the tech boom here in the Valley. When I was at IBM I and my group did a lot of interviewing, both on the phone and in person. It took up a lot of time. We got resumes from outside recruiters and we got a lot of transfer requests from other parts of the company. Even with all of those resumes, I still couldn't hire people as fast as I wanted to. Sure, there were lots of engineers available, but most of them just weren't that good. Truly talented "star" engineers are rare.
When I found a star, I did what it took to hire them, even if they weren't a US citizen. H1-B paperwork is a royal PITA, as is getting approval from umpteen levels of management. (If you're a really bad person, you come back in the next life as an immigration lawyer.) It also costs a lot of money to sponsor someone for an H1. I think it was around $5,000 when you added up the application fees, lawyer's fees and so on, but I can't remember. Then you have to do the green card a year or so later, and it costs even more and has more paperwork.
We definitely weren't saving money by hiring people on H1-B's. In addition to the legal fees and management time we spent on the visas, we were paying the H1 folks the same salaries we'd pay anyone else. Every few months we'd informally rank all the employees at the site and make sure the salaries lined up with the rankings, with absolutely no concern over visa status. The better, more productive engineers got paid more, period. There were definitely senior engineers who happened to be on H1's who got paid more than more junior (but still bright) engineers without much experience. I didn't see any correlation with visa status, except maybe that I never made any college hires of people on H1's. (It wouldn't have been worth the expense of flying them over here for an interview; the same thing applies to out-of-town junior-level US people.)
Many people think that market conditions have changed in the last few years and that H1s are now mostly obsolete. I think that may be true at some levels of the industry. But even with all the layoffs in the last couple of years, extremely bright "star" engineers are still hard to find. For an example, look at all the engineering openings at Google [google.com]. You'd think that in a down economy with lots of engineers out of work, they'd be able to hire people as quickly as they wanted to. If they wanted just anybody, that might be true. But they're also feeding off the top of the food chain; they only want
Re:What's a product? What's a solution? (Score:5, Insightful)
They're shifting a commodity product. Classic economics: high-volume, low margin vs. low-volume high-margin, sure Sun don't sell many F15K's but they do sell a significant number of smaller boxes in the 8 to 24 CPU bracket. List price they make over 90% margin on every box they sell - as do HP and IBM. Simple, there's room for both. Dell are piggy-backing off of intel's R&D, Sun invest billions in R&D and recoup the investment over the longer term, on boxes which are as scalable as they are upgradable (with faster CPU's etc.) Sun Enterprise boxes, the 3000-6500 are still holding a amazing amount of their value 6 years after they came out, on a chassis which will accept 167MHz-400MHz CPUs. Just have a look on ebay.
Many problems can be solved by clustering cheap boxes together to achieve parallelism, some problems can't. Some customers need ultra reliable, 64bit big iron boxes with masses of storage. Many don't. Most slashdotters have never experienced high-end enterprise computing, a few have.
I've said it before, I'll say it again - the day Sun stop investing in SPARC/Solaris is the day I sell my stock - I'm not at all happy with the Xeon box precedent, but Sun have had short lived product lines like this before, I wouldn't touch them with a barge pole.
Re:well, I read the whole article (Score:3, Insightful)
"But they have over $5 billion in the bank..."
Granted the poster mentions other good qualities such as talent pool, etc., but if you have to lead in with how much they have in the bank, its never a good sign. Just because they have a lot of $$$ does not necessarily indicate any potential for turn around. The only thing it says is how much money they have, that's all, nothing more.
Re:well, I read the whole article (Score:4, Insightful)
How socialist California oppresses Scott McNealy (Score:3, Insightful)
Look, you poor oppressed prick; at least you didn't have to wear a bustier and French kiss Madonna.