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by Wolf Paulus.
Original Post: Supernova - Part 2
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Definition: A supernova represents the very final stages of evolution for (a) Sun. It is the final huge mass-loss stage of a dying high-mass Sun where the outer layers are ejected during the core's collapse to form a neutron star.
Ed Zander, Joe Shoemaker, Mike Lehman, Larry Hambly, and Stephen DeWitt all left Sun in the 1st half of 2002. This was more of a management shakeup then anything else and while the stock dropped from $14 to below $4, it didn't influence what was going on with Java all that much.
Moving fast forward 2 years, the Sun-Microsoft settlement seemed to have only little effect on the (NasdaqNM:SUNW) chart ($4 before the settlement was announced and $3.69 today) but the brain-drain had started, leaving Sun and Java somewhat demoralized state, one must assume:
It all started back in September:
Sept.9, 2003 Bill Joy, Chief Scientist, leaves Sun Microsystems.
April 5, 2004: Rich Green, VP of Developer Platforms, leaves Sun Microsystems.
April 20, 2004: Wolfgang Gentzsch, Gridcomputing Research Lead, leaves Sun Microsystems.
July 7, 2004: Joshua Bloch, Distinguished Engineer, leaves Sun Microsystems.
July 16, 2004: Peder Ulander, Linux Desktop Project Lead, leaves Sun Microsystems.
And then of course there are all the good hard working engineers that have left Sun without making the news ...
Today, Rob Gingell, Sun's chief engineer and a 20-year Sun veteran, has left Sun to join his old colleague Rich Green to become executive VP and CTO of Cassatt Corporation. Cassatt Corporation exists since September 2003, focuses on grid computing and SOA (service-oriented architecture) technologies, and is lead by CEO Bill Coleman (BEA Systems co-founder).