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Supernova 2008 Day 1 - Jonathan Schwartz - Restructuring ITJune 17th, 2008 at 5:36 pmSource:CenterNetworks
Five years ago: Sun thought: "people want the cheapest storage devices, but highest storage reliability - with products that are not reliable." From this effort, out popped ZFS. In 2005, Sun decided to give it away for free - something that had taken 100s of millions of dollars in development and Sun decided to give the architecture AND the source code away for FREE. After a year, ZFS has been ported into MacOS X (Sun Leopard), ports were done to Linux community - and has gone around the world - essentially teaching people how to use storage, not manage it. Around 2006-2007, Sun now launched a piece of data storage tech - "Thumper" which had 24T of storage at a cost of about $1/Gb. In two quarters, they went from 0 to $100M in revenues - simply because the community was already prepped for the product offered by the introduction of ZFS to the community. So, there are two reasons to invent the product:
He then shows the following map: http://www.sysnet/sunwarp.net/maps
Downloaders of the ZFS source code have to "earn" registration - if a company mandates registration, many people will often not do it. But by earning access and agreeing to share the information, the customer gets something (access). in exchange for this registration, Sun gets a "dot". He then shows a photo of 13M dots who have downloaded the ZFS system. "Internet makes it easier to attract the customers across the world. Dots tend to cluster around population and academic centers. The dot tells how/where a customer is. After our acquisition of mySQL, we are adding approximately 100K new "dots" a day." Q/A:
Kwerb: So, it is about distribution? Kwerb: How do you monetize? And, just because you are not charging for your product, you can not simply ignore the customer. Just like a media company, you make money from your customers (the advertisers/the corporates), as long as your content is interesting to your customers/viewers. So, by giving away the source code for free, we have been able to grow the customer base. Free and popular tend to go hand-in-hand, but not necessarily. Kwerb: how do you distinguish? Anyone who can use adoption to drive revenue will succeed in this model. Kwerb: So, how do you change the direction of the supertanker (Sun)?
Shannon Clark: So, you collected all of that information? How did you know what to collect? Kwerb: Open source doesn’t it conflict with IP? Some of the commercial companies need a commercial license - so Sun retains the flexibility and are able to control their own intellectual property. Kwerb: Sort of a kind of ju-jit-zsu?
Kwerb: Thoughts on Microhoo? For example, OpenOffice was launched 10 years ago. Today, there are over 110M unique users for OpenOffice. Companies that are offering $200-300 per license will find the next generation of purchasers a challenge. I think we are in the second inning on the Internet services - the first was search, the next was news, and now infrastructure software. But there are plenty of things have not been impacted by network effect yet - but they will. For example: cars - not yet. Carriers have been - they offer the free phones to get you on a plan, banks offer free checks. Major consumer-based products have not been able to do this. Imagine what would happen if a phone was given that would have a completely free calling plan. While, the consumer benefit is not readily apparent - companies will use analytics to make good money out of the data. Sanford Dickert is with Contagious Conversations, a social-media consulting firm offering general contracting services for the digital age. Sanford is part of the New York Tech community, helping to strengthen the technology community though his work in coworking (cooperBricolage and New Work City) and support for various networking organizations (co-producer of the New York Tech Meetup when events are brought to the Cooper Union). In other roles, Sanford has been an Adjunct Professor at Cooper Union and Polytechnic, teaching on Web 2.0 concepts and product development, as well as the Chief Technology Officer for the John Kerry for President Campaign. In his "spare time", he also publishes his thoughts on social media, political technology and online engagement in a number of publications. Partner Links
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