main
Report a problem

Sun undercuts Red Hat on support pricing

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 17 January 2007 - 11:05 · 1 comment & 1349 views

Advertisement (Why?)
Sun Microsystems is presenting a challenge to Red Hat with competitively priced support in an update of its Solaris 10 operating system, announced Tuesday. Open-source Solaris 10 11/06 comes with support subscriptions at what Sun says is half the price of a comparable support plan from Linux distributor Red Hat. Red Hat, the largest Linux distribution provider, has faced support price pressure from others, most notably a deal announced in October 2006 by database software company Oracle. Microsoft in November aligned with Novell, a rival Linux distributor to Red Hat. "It's obvious that Sun is gunning for Red Hat," said Jonathan Eunice, founder of the technology research firm Illuminata. Solaris is a Unix-based operating system also available for free, though Sun charges for support. Linux distributors adopt a similar business model.

Sun's Solaris annual support contracts range from $240 to $1,180 for one- or two-socket x86 servers, depending on whether the buyer chooses the "basic" or "premium" plan. Sun's basic plan costs about 40 percent less and the premium plan about 50 percent less than comparable Red Hat plans, said Sun spokesman Bob Wientzen. Red Hat's Web site lists Red Hat Linux ES basic for $349 per year per system and Red Hat Linux AS premium for $2,499. A Red Hat spokesman did not return calls and an e-mail requesting comment, but after Oracle's move last fall, Red Hat chief executive officer Matthew Szulik said Red Hat would not lower its prices due to a competitor's price cuts.

View: The full story
News source: InfoWorld

Post a comment · Send to friend Comments · There are 1 additional comments
#1 Yogurth on 17 Jan 2007 - 11:44
Good news. This will mean Corporate Linux prices will also go down on larger scale and probably bring wider adoption, atleast on server side. As for desktops Linux is still a far cry for average user, but hopefully this will change too as KDE 4 and Gnome 3 along with new user oriented dir structure and setup system(both for apps and for system itself..though system setup is almost a breeze already on some linux distributions) are closing to their respective releases.

Commenting has either been disabled on this article or you are not logged in. Click here to login or register, its free!

Note: Anonymous commenting is disabled in order to keep the quality of responses to a high standard.

Advertisement (Why?)