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Sun fleshes out its N1 push

Lesson one: Change management

By Stephen Shankland

Published: 23 October 2002 08:30 GMT

Sun Microsystems began selling new software yesterday to control hundreds of servers in one fell swoop, a step in its N1 strategy to shield administrators from mundane management jobs.

Sun's Change Manager lets an administrator simultaneously update a large group of servers - for example, all the computers a company uses to manage email or to host the corporate website. The software, code-named iChange, can be used to perform tasks such as upgrading an operating system or installing a new program, said Jonathan Han, a Sun senior product manager.

The software is a step toward N1, Sun's initiative to turn datacentres crammed with computers, storage and networking gear into more of a living, breathing system that automatically adjusts to meet changing computing demands. With Change Manager, server administration "still is a manual task, it's just a streamlined manual task", said IDC analyst John Humphreys. "But as you move to automate it, that's when you cross that threshold... toward N1."

N1 is the latest incarnation of Sun's effort to convince customers that it is better to buy a host of technologies tuned to work together rather than to risk the hidden costs of assembling various components themselves. While the N1 plan has been received warmly, it's years away from reality and Sun has nearer-term concerns with profitability, layoffs and declining revenue.

Change Manager costs $5,000 for the management software plus $250 for each server that's being managed - an attractive price, according to analysts. "What we're seeing is one-third of administrators' time is spent on server deployments, updates and patches," Humphreys said, so a few hours saved rapidly pays off.

Sun isn't the only company looking to make money from increased automation and easier administration. IBM and Hewlett-Packard have comparable efforts, as have start-ups such as Jareva, PlateSpin and Think Dynamics, Humphreys said.

Change Manager requires features built into Sun's Solaris 9 operating system and the most recent version of Solaris 8. It doesn't work with Solaris for Intel-compatible chips or with Linux, though Sun has promised Linux will be a part of N1 and that many of its software products will be available on Linux.

"We're taking a look at that in a future release. It's very preliminary, and it's purely discussions at this point," Han said of a Linux version.

Stephen Shankland writes for CNET News.com.

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