Sun : Open source Java due in late '06, '07

23.10.2006
Rich Green is in his second incarnation at Sun Microsystems, returning in May as executive vice president for software at the company. He is responsible for the Solaris Enterprise System, including the Solaris OS, the Java Enterprise System suites, N1 management software, Sun Studio and Java Studio developer tools. Green also heads up a variety of industry-standards efforts and open source communities. InfoWorld Editor at Large Paul Krill met with Green last Friday at Sun offices in Menlo Park, Calif. to discuss the open-sourcing of Java and Solaris, as well as a number of other topics pertaining to the company, including the recent changing of the guard at the CEO level at Sun.

InfoWorld: You had left Sun and returned. What was that about?

Rich Green: Oh gosh, it seems like such old news at this point. I left Sun in 2004, after wrapping up the Microsoft litigation, and went off to try my hand in the startup world and joined up with Bill Coleman at Cassatt Corporation and worked there for two years pulling together the whole product and product strategy program and getting that business off the ground. Then had the opportunity to come back to Sun to run software, and once Sun is in your blood it's hard to shake it and I couldn't resist the opportunity. So I returned in May of 2006.

IW: What was your role at Sun in the previous incarnation?

Green: I was the head of Java and developer tools and programs.

IW: So, this has only been a few months that you've been back?