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Sun's centres for enabling net business
By N. N. Sachitanand
BANGALORE, APRIL 10. What are the primary concerns of a web-based
startup or an established company extending its business to the
web? A quick start, smooth running, easy scalability and minimum
cost to performance ratio - for starters.
The practice till now has been for the company's consultant and
system integrator to painstakingly design the system from
scratch, get it running, pray that it holds and, when the
problems come, start fire fighting. For their client company it
could mean the end of a promising venture or, in the case of
established businesses, a bout of painful destabilisation.
Now the California-based Sun Microsystems, which has been a flag-
bearer of the Internet revolution, has come up with a facility to
both hasten and smoothen the entry of businesses into the
Internet world. Briefing this correspondent in Bangalore Mr. Al
Foley, SI Alliance Director of Sun Microsystems, informed that
during the last two years, Sun has set up three dotcom/ready
competency centres at Menlo Park (California), Paris and Tokyo to
help develop, test and evaluate e-business solutions.
An investment of around $15 to 20 million has gone into each one
of these centres, equipped with market-leading business software
and all sorts of hardware. In any one of these centres,
consultants and system integrators can, with the assistance of
the Sun technologists, quickly prepare solution blueprints
encompassing architecture building blocks, template, hardware and
software configurations, integration testing plan and roll-out
strategy.
According to Mr. Foley, these centres can help cut down the
``time to market'' for dotcom startups from the usual six months
to one year to just around four to six weeks. And that is a big
gain in a market which distinctly blesses the early birds. Mr.
Foley hinted that the next two such dotcom competency centres of
Sun might come up in Australia and Singapore within a year, with
India getting one later on. Sun is also putting up, along similar
lines a wireless.com laboratory at Menlo Park (California), for
developing and testing mobile commerce business models and
solutions, which should be in operation in another three months.
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