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What's Hot? Sun's New Student Developer Community - What's Not? The Digital Divide

What's Hot? Sun's New Student Developer Community
What's Not? The Digital Divide

Scott McNealy Unveils New Initiatives to Bridge the Gap

SAN FRANCISCO – February 17, 2005 – Speaking to a gathering of educators from around the world, Sun Microsystems, Inc. (Nasdaq: SUNW) Chairman and CEO Scott McNealy today outlined Sun's expanded student developer community program, designed to assist young software developers in learning how to initiate open, secure projects based on Sun's applications. With the recent release of Solaris 10 Operating System, it is anticipated that there will be significant emphasis on the Solaris OS.

"Solaris is enjoying a tremendous surge in popularity with more than 500,000 downloads since the release of Solaris 10," McNealy said. "We want young developers around the world to have access to the tools, the experience and the necessary knowledge to write to this environment and to take advantage of its superior features."

Sun will offer the student developer community direct access to the brightest minds at Sun, free software development tools, and free web-based training and donations to student labs at select universities. Through its Academic Excellence Grants, Sun has earmarked $1 million worth of lab donations for the program and has already provided $400,000 in funding this year. (For terms and conditions, visit http://www.sun.com/edu)

Sun's program will make it easy and affordable for young developers to write to the widely adopted Solaris platform by making software development tools and training programs available, creating opportunities for collaboration through the existing Sun Developer Network, and providing special offers for third party discounts. For further details and registrations students should visit: http://www.sun.com/edu/student_developer.

McNealy, made the announcement during a keynote address on the closing day of Sun's 2005 Worldwide Education & Research Conference.

"Nowhere is the digital divide wider or deeper than in the area of education," McNealy said. "We need to close that divide, not widen it. The educational experience for the 'haves' is qualitatively different from those on the other side. We must encourage and train the next generation of developers to think big and act boldly no matter what side of the divide they're on."

Helping to Bridge the Digital Divide

McNealy used the occasion to announce other projects Sun is involved in to promote the closing of the digital divide, including:

  • A pledge to academic and research institutions to donate ten blocks of 100,000 hours of CPU processing power, accompanied by 100 terabytes of data storage capacity per month, within the next year.
  • Insight into discussions with Nicholas Negroponte, the founder and chairman of the MIT Media Lab, exploring ways in which Sun can contribute software to his $100 laptop idea for education ministries in developing nations.

"What's Hot... and What's Not" in Education

To illustrate other ways in which technology could advance the goal of closing the digital divide, McNealy took his audience through a tour of "what's hot... and what's not" in education. Highlights include:

  • Given their average price of over $100, textbooks are not hot. On the other hand Web-based training is hot.
  • Expensive, proprietary software stacks are not hot, while open source projects like OpenSolaris OS and Firefox are hot.
  • Overcrowded classrooms? Not hot. When three million students took at least one on-line course last year, distance learning is hot.
  • Other items on McNealy's hot list included: Google, blogs and RFID.
  • Not hot? Brick and mortar libraries, television network news and manual inventory management.

McNealy urged the audience to continue pushing technology into every aspect of the education process, noting that students and educators of every age, background and location can benefit.

"We don't want to automate the library or the classroom, we want to automate the entire education system," McNealy concluded. "We don't just want 'no child left behind,' we want 'no child held back' as well."

About Sun Microsystems, Inc.

Since its inception in 1982, a singular vision -- "The Network Is The Computer" -- has propelled Sun Microsystems, Inc. (Nasdaq: SUNW) to its position as a leading provider of industrial-strength hardware, software and services that make the Net work. Sun can be found in more than 100 countries and on the World Wide Web at http://sun.com


Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo, Solaris, OpenSolaris and The Network Is The Computer are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the United States and other countries.

 
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