Sun's head of open source leaves the company
By Maggie Holland,
Oracle has lost its third high-profile executive since it merged with Sun Microsystems in a $7.4 billion deal at the beginning of the year.
Simon Phipps, previously chief open source officer, announced his departure on his blog earlier this week.
"Today is my last day of employment at Sun (well, it became Oracle on March 1st in the UK but you know what I mean). I am a few months short of my 10th anniversary there (I joined at JavaOne in 2000) and my 5th anniversary as Chief Open Source Officer. I hope you’ll forgive a little reminiscence... Looking back, we’ve achieved some amazing things," he wrote.
While Phipps didn't disclose the reasons for his departure - which sees him in the company of fellow leavers founder Scott McNealy and chief executive Jonathan Schwartz, he did reminisce about what he and his fellow workers had managed to achieve, and not achieve, during his tenure.
"There are far too many people to attempt to thank here – each “we” above represents a bunch of smart people of whom I was the least. You all know who you are, thank-you so much for the privilege of working with you," he added.
"Of course, no story with highlights like that can be without disappointments too. I’m sad that Apache did not get the TCK license they requested. I’m sad that we didn’t get the code for some of those projects permanently outside the sun firewall. I’m sad we never got to a place where co-developers become a priority for various product teams. And I’m sad that, despite the success of the open source software businesses, it still wasn’t enough to rescue Sun in the end. But overall, I am amazed and humbled to see what the open source team at Sun has achieved."
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Strategy Analysis & Insight
What should RIM do to recapture the attention of businesses?
We asked some of the experts on our IT Pro Leader Board what RIM should do next to help elevate its status in the enterprise space. Here’s what they had to say…
- Q&A: Colin Bannister, UK CTO, CA Technologies
- Will someone rid me of these troublesome Macs?
- What can Intel bring to the smartphone market?
- Q&A: Cisco on servers, storage and strategy
- Q&A: Raj Samani, CTO McAfee
- Erase and rewind: the EU and privacy
- Does 2012 spell doom and gloom for the tech sector?
- OK, computer
- Datacentre data crunch
Latest Strategy Reviews
ThinPrint Printer Dashboard review: First Look
- Office 365 review: First look
- Novell ZENworks Configuration Management 11 Standard Edition review
- Mindjet MindManager 9 review
- Tableau Desktop Professional Edition review
- Spiceworks review
- Head to Head: Parallels Desktop 6 vs VMware Fusion 3
- Swiftlight review
- FaceTime Communications USG-1030 review
- Top 10 iPad apps for business review
advertisement
Most popular
- Will someone rid me of these troublesome Macs?
- BT considering Ofcom price cap appeal
- Google sends in Bouncer to sort out malicious apps
- Anonymous publishes FBI hacking call
- ACTA: the basics, the controversies, and the future
- Virgin 100Mbps rollout 'ahead of schedule'
- Who to trust after the VeriSign hack?
- Head to Head: Mac OS X 10.7 Lion vs Windows 7
- VeriSign admits 2010 hack
- What should RIM do to recapture the attention of businesses?
Latest News Videos in Strategy
Q&A: David Elton, PA Consulting Group
CIOs are increasingly influential, but have to juggle "dual roles", study finds.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.




