SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - Sun Microsystems Inc. (SUNW.O: Quote, Profile, Research) on Sunday introduced the long-awaited next version of its operating system, Solaris 10, which the network computer maker is betting on to help bring itself back to sustained profitability.
Sun said that Solaris 10, a version of the heavy-duty Unix operating system used by large computer data centers, banks, telecommunications firms and governments, cost more than $500 million in research and development. Sun claims more than 600 new features for Solaris 10.
Sun is relying on Solaris 10, which will be available at the end of January, to set it apart from rivals such as International Business Machines Corp. IBM.N Hewlett-Packard Co. (HPQ.N: Quote, Profile, Research) and Dell Inc. (DELL.O: Quote, Profile, Research) , as it battles back from a series of missteps since the implosion of the dot-com and telecommunications bubbles of the late 1990s, analysts said.
"Solaris 10 is what Sun believes will differentiate itself from companies like Dell and others," said Tony Iams, an analyst at D.H. Brown Associates of Port Chester, New York. "There are a number of very exciting new functions in this release that are going to be very valuable for their existing customers and they're also trying to capture new customers with their Opteron servers."
Reuters