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Understanding Sun’s Business - Q1 Results

we announced our earnings today, and put specifics everywhere our preannouncement from a week ago.

We also greatly increased the transparency of Sun’s business by providing line item detail surrounding our most important product categories (and we broke out core elements of our Software business for the first time). If you’d like to listen to our earnings call, just click here - in addition, here’s a quick synopsis of the quarter and our business overall.

At a corporate level in Q1, Sun’s revenue was down 7% year over year. Growth in our emerging products was more than offset by declines in our traditional, high end products. We were surprised by the magnitude of the decline, which reflected a dramatic slowing in the US and Europe, and the effects the credit crisis is having on our customers - across nearly all geographies and industries, but clearly concentrated among financial services companies.

Unlike our peers, Sun is more exposed to high end systems - so declines in this business have an immediate impact, even if our newer, emerging businesses demonstrate fantastic growth (which many did). For example, the Tape market won’t sustain 30% year over year growth for any participant - but our ZFS based OpenStorage products are growing at more than 100%. The latter are smaller, emerging businesses, driven by open source and new innovations - and will take time to eclipse more traditional businesses in our P&L.

To drive an even greater level of transparency for investors and analysts, we’ve added a new management report to our quarterly updates - for the first time, this will give line item detail of our performance, and a sense for how we’re making some of the most important decisions at the core of our long term strategy. You can find that break out, here.

Here are a few of the major questions I’m receiving:

What went well within the quarter?

The biggest highlights were the performance of our Solaris based, chip multi-threading (CMT) systems, which again grew a whopping 80%, year over year. These systems leverage awareness of Solaris/Opensolaris and our outstanding ISV portfolio, and are driven by extreme energy efficiency and virtualization - attributes we just multiplied with the launch of our newest CMT system: the T5440.

Simultaneously, our Open Storage systems also delivered a great quarter, up 150+% year over year. These systems, known by many as Thumpers, are amplified by the awareness of our open source ZFS file system, a technology at the heart of Sun’s storage business. You’ll be hearing more about Open Storage at a launch event we’re holding on November 10th. If you’re technical, and you want some hints about what we’re about to unveil, click here.

And finally, most of our software business grew - including MySQL, Java, alongside Solaris, management and our virtualization products. As we’ve been saying, open source is a great distribution model - and it feeds a great revenue model.

What about lowlights?

Clearly the traditional businesses slowed significantly - with enterprise systems (our largest, mainframe class systems) declining year over year. This time last year, those same systems grew nearly 20% - so the downturn is having an impact. It’s crucial to understand these systems are far less sensitive to open source innovations or Solaris adoption - they’re sold to customers who are scaling up existing Solaris applications, who rely on quality, fault tolerance and our capacity to deliver mainframe scale. We and Fujitsu just expanded this product line - and no matter the downturn, we remain exceptionally focused and committed to traditional enterprise computing. The expansion of scale out computing doesn’t negate scale up computing - if anything, it leads to even greater demand, over time. IBM was right, mainframes will always be sexy (especially when they run Solaris :).

Florida today

On the storage front, tape declined slightly, although our high end storage systems grew, yielding growth overall in storage - growth we’re driving to accelerate with the introduction of our upcoming Open Storage innovations.

Why were gross margins lower this quarter?

A few reasons that Mike Lehman, our CFO, elaborated on during the call - the lull in very high end systems, along with discounting and component pricing depressed gross margins. In addition, we went through a series of product transition related expenses this quarter we do not expect to recur, that depressed margins by around 2 percentage points.

Now, how is Software growing if you give everything away?

We make our software freely available to enable its distribution to the farthest reaches of the market - which …

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