JavaOne 06 DayFour
- By John K. Waters
- May 19, 2006
The
streets outside the Moscone Center are a bustling blur and the beanbag chairs
down by the big screen are calling my name.
Must be Day
Four of JavaOne
.
Scott
McNealy took the stage today to close the conference, and he looked more relaxed
than he has in a while— which I suppose means that his new role is agreeing with
him.
And he's
still a wiseacre, which I found comforting. He quipped that all the execs at Sun
are now ''trying desperately to grow a pony tail.'' His pre-pony-tailed
successor, Mr. Schwartz, who was also onstage, smiled tolerantly.
McNealy
offered his trademark theft of a David Letterman bit: his Top Ten list. This
year the subject was ''the Top 10 best things about not being CEO.'' To
wit:
-
No.
10: ''I don't have to apologize for the stuff I say to Wall Street, Jonathan
does.''
-
No.
9: ''I'm no longer on the most overpaid CEO list.''
-
No.
8: ''I just say, 'See Jonathan on that.''
-
No.
7: ''I read Hockey News without guilt.''
-
No.
6: ''I shave even less often.''
-
No.
5: ''No more SOX (Sarbanes-Oxley) certifications to sign.''
-
No.
4: ''I have someone to blame now.''
-
No.
3: ''I can sell my last business suit.''
-
No.
2: ''Jonathan doesn't golf, so I guess I gotta do it.''
-
And the
No. 1 best thing about no longer being the CEO of Sun? ''My new office is very
close to the men's room.''
An oldie but a goldie, the list got some
big laughs.
McNealy grew serious as he talked
about his latest passion: using Java to bridge the so-called digital divide. He
brought up this somewhat dated concept at the RSA Security conference earlier
this year, but I suspect that it's been on his to-do list for quite a while. And
he imbued it today with urgency with some disturbing statistics. Even
though we're now in what McNealy calls ''The Participation Age,'' in which more
than three million new people are added to the network each week, ''three out of
four folks on the planet [are] not connected,'' he said. ''It's an enormous
tragedy, but also a huge opportunity.''
''You,''
he added, referring to the Java jocks in the audience, ''are cursed with the
opportunity to really make a difference on this planet.''
McNealy's
take on this problem is both original and self-serving— which is to say,
fascinating: He dismissed MIT Media Lab co-founder Nicholas Negroponte's
$100-PC-for-the-masses idea because of it's potential for negative
environmental impact. ''Imagine all [people] turning on Dell computers
tomorrow,'' he said. ''We'd be three feet under from global warming.'' The
better solution, he insisted, is some combination of Web services, thin clients,
and network computing.
''The
goal is to get everybody on the network,'' he said. ''And in my new job I'm
spending a lot of time working on this and talking to governments around the
world.''
Later,
James Gosling showed a video commemorating McNealy's days in the big chair at
Sun. In the video, Gosling, the guy credited with creating Java, credited
McNealy with making Java real. ''Without Scott McNealy, there's no way Java
would have happened,'' he said. Some former Sun execs were also featured on the
video, including co-founders Bill Joy and Eric Schmidt (now CEO at Google).
Gosling also presented McNealy with a golden statue of Duke, Java's marshmallowy
mascot, and a plaque.
***
Earlier
this week, I dubbed ''AJAX'' the buzzword of this year's conference, but a very
close second was ''NetBeans.'' Sun was pounding the NetBeans drum at a ferocious
beat this year (think ''Wipeout'' meets ''Ina Goda Davida''). They even held a
NetBeans Day prior to the show at the Argent Hotel, which was reportedly packed.
NetBeans
is a great family of tools, which is getting better, and it has a devoted
following. But it's not clear to me why Sun continues to put so much muscle and
money behind a free Java IDE in a world all but taken over by Eclipse.
I
posed this question to just about everybody at the conference, and I have to say
that I never got a perfect answer. But I did get a plausible explanation from
Sun's Richard Sands. Sands is a marketing dude focused on Java SE, but he
managed to come across as a straight shooter anyway.
''Why
do we continue to support NetBeans, as opposed to just joining Eclipse and
getting it over with, so to speak?'' he said. ''The reason is that choice is
what it's all about in developer land. If you have only one toolset out there,
that isn't going to advance the state of developer tools. You need competition
to have a healthy market, and we believe that NetBeans a very competitive
offering.''
I guess if
you believe that having choices among genuinely competitive products is
important, and no one else is offering a serious alternative, the responsible
thing to do is offer that choice. It sounds a little like marketing BS, but it
could also be the answer.
Anybody
out there got a better one?
BTW:
I never gave in to the siren call of the beanbag chairs. Oh, they're bulgy soft,
like vinyl-covered dollops of cloud. And dropping down into one after a long
week of hot footing it around Moscone might seem like the perfect reward. But
their squishy allure is dangerous bait for the husky reporter, who, once
ensnared, finds himself in a smothering embrace from which he cannot extract
himself without considerable embarrassment.
Next year, I'm hoping for La-Z-Boys.
Ciao
for now.
###