A couple of years back, MySQL embarked upon a strategy to be more open and encourage third-party companies to create their own pluggable storage engines. The strategy was partly a response to Oracle's acquisition of InnoDB, which was at the time the leading transactional storage engine. Since then, we've seen new storage engines announced and released every year, typically at the April MySQL Users Conference.
As a fitting posting for April 1, here's a video that I put together to commemorate Marten Mickos, CEO of MySQL who is leaving Sun today. It was my pleasure to work with Marten for more than five years at MySQL. He was truly a unique CEO; he followed Drucker's rules and came up with new innovative ideas that we put into action.
Yesterday Sun introduced Glassfish Portfolio. Its a new stack of open source middleware products including Glassfish Enterprise Server, Glassfish ESB, Glassfish Web Space Server, and the new Glassfish Web Stack, which includes support for projects such as Tomcat, Memcached, Apache, PHP, Ruby and Python and a copy of MySQL Community.
It’s a pretty complete infrastructure stack. What it is not, however, is an integrated LAMP stack, despite Sun’s reference to it as such not once but twice on its press announcement.
Glassfish Portfolio runs on Linux of course, as well as Solaris, but it does not contain Linux (integrated or otherwise) or Linux services (although that is available …
[Read more]I just got news that Marten Mickos, former MySQL CEO, is to depart Sun amid a reorganisation of its infrastructure and database business units. Don’t expect an announcement from Sun on this, but the news is confirmed.
It seems that Sun is combining its Software Infrastructure organization with its Database Group to form a unified open source product group under the leadership of Karen Tegan Padir, vice president of MySQL & Software Infrastructure.
Marten will be transitioning out of Sun by the end of the company’s (current) third quarter.
Marten’s departure is a big loss for Sun and follows quickly after the departures of Monty Widenius and …
[Read more]Topics for this podcast:
* Open source getting, and going without VC investment
* Oracle contributions to Linux and open source
* Sun’s latest moves with MySQL database and version 5.1
* Linux in high-end computing
iTunes or direct download (25:50, 6.0 MB)
I just noticed that Sun/MySQL has dropped SCO OpenServer from its list of supported operating systems for MySQL 5.1 and higher (along with Mac OS X 10.3 and QNX).
It is not a massive surprise to see MySQL doing this given SCO’s current position but MySQL teamed up with SCO in the midst of its controversial legal claims against IBM et al, so I thought the end of the deal warranted a quick mention.
At the time Marten Mickos defended the deal by claiming that he hoped working with MySQL would educate SCO’s executives:
“In a partnership you exchange thoughts,” he said. “If you exchange thoughts hopefully the other side will listen to you. We understand …
[Read more]…is the title of this post written by Tim Bray a few days ago in which he outlined the directions he would like to see his employer take to improve its fortunes.
He also invited others to continue the thought process. Many have already done so (I’ll include the best in tomorrow’s CAOS Links post) and given my recent constructive criticism of Sun’s open source strategy I feel compelled to provide some answers as well as questions.
I’m sure there are lots of things Sun should be doing with relation to storage and servers and processors and client devices, but I’m going to stick to what I know. What would I do?
Light a fire under MySQL
When Sun announced its acquisition …
NetBeans 6.5
is soon to be released. After 10 years of
NetBeans that's the first version of Sun's OpenSource IDE
featuring PHP
support. While 6.5 is waiting to be packaged the development
didn't stop and the first features for the successor,
NetBeans.next, are already being developed. David Van Couvering just showed a preview of a
cool new feature: SQL completion in PHP strings, if it does what
the screenshot promises that's a damn great addition in my
opinion....
It’s been a crazy month here at Kickfire which is why I have fallen a bit behind on my postings – a new product, new customers, a new CEO, a new relationship with Sun/MySQL, a new website … and a new baby girl! Here’s a quick summary of all that has been going on:
New Product
We quietly came out of beta a
month ago. After nearly two and half years in development, this
is a great achievement for the company. The team took on a hugely
ambitious project: to re-design how SQL is processed today to be
able to deliver an order of magnitude improvement in
price/performance relative to any other data warehousing solution
on the market. This project involved bringing together over 50 of
the industry’s smartest database and hardware engineers to
build a new type of database machine that includes the
world’s first SQL chip, an ultra-modern database kernel, and
advanced system features. Kickfire’s four data …
Señoras y señores, I am happy to have been part of the MySQL
launch in Argentina yesterday. Visiting Argentina has been a
great opportunity to meet with the MySQL users and not-yet-users
in a country with 30 degrees Celsius, with
colourful houses in La Boca, with an omnipresent Diego Maradona, and only minor
challenges in the form of payment methods when using local transport.
On Monday evening, I visited the Universidad Nacional De La Matanza. Together …
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