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Sun Microsystems slashes jobs in survival fight
Comments 0 | Recommend 0SAN FRANCISCO • The economic downturn might be pushing Sun Microsystems Inc., one of the storied names in computing, to the brink of extinction.
The company's servers and software helped stimulate the Internet boom, and its engineering acumen is revered. But Sun never fully recovered from the previous financial crisis - the dot-com meltdown - and it has been steamrolled by big shifts in the way businesses buy back-end computers.
Now Santa Clara, Calif.-based Sun plans to slash up to 6,000 jobs, or 18 percent of its global work force, as it scrambles to cut costs to offset a slump in sales of its high-end servers. Sales of those machines fell 27 percent in the latest quarter as banks and other big customers went under or couldn't get loans to buy the machines.
"These are hard but necessary changes," Jonathan Schwartz, Sun's chief executive, said Friday as he disclosed the cuts.
Sun has a campus in Broomfield, northwest of Denver, but it wasn't clear how it would be affected.
The company also said its software chief, Rich Green, has resigned as the company divides its software division into three new business groups. One will handle Sun's Java programming language - a key ingredient for many Web sites - and open-source database offerings.
Open-source software is free software for which Sun sells support services. Another will be responsible for Sun's Solaris operating system, which is used to run servers.
The third will focus on developing programs for "cloud computing" services delivered over the Internet.
Sun's extreme restructuring is what many investors were calling for. It follows three other rounds of layoffs in the past three years in which nearly 7,000 jobs were axed.
Analysts say it gives Sun breathing room to improve its margins and try to return to profitability.
It might not be enough, though, to preserve Sun as the company is currently structured if losses keep mounting, renewing speculation about a possible spinoff or sale. Fujitsu Ltd., Hewlett-Packard Co., IBM Corp. or Dell Inc. are potential suitors.
"They still have strong cash on the balance sheet, and they're still generating free cash flow, so they're not dead yet, but the patient is definitely on the respirator," said Rick Hanna, an equity analyst with Morningstar Inc.






