The Register® — Biting the hand that feeds IT

Debian founder crowned Sun King of OS

Murdock joins Sun for Solaris- Linux love-in

Free whitepaper – Cooling strategies for ultra-high density racks and blade servers

Ian Murdock, the father of Debian, is joining Sun Microsystems, to head up the company's operating systems platform strategy.

He says in his blog that "everything I know about computing I learned on those Sun workstations" in the computer science building at Purdue University in Indiana.

Murdock is leaving the Linux Foundation for his new billet and is giving broadbrush hints for what he'll be getting up to:

"You can probably guess from my background and earlier writings that I'll be advocating that Solaris needs to close the usability gap with Linux to be competitive; that while as I believe Solaris needs to change in some ways, I also believe deeply in the importance of backward compatibility; and that even with Solaris front and center, I'm pretty strongly of the opinion that Linux needs to play a clearer role in the platform strategy."

We guess that usability crack means getting a Solaris install down from a day to about an hour.

The fresh Solaris blood will be welcomed after Sun lost a number of top execs, who we understand had a smashing going away party last week.

Founded by Murdock in 1993, the Debian Project in 1993 is probably the most significant non-commercial Linux distro in use today. And the name? Murdock's wife's name is Deb and he is Ian, so ... ®

Free whitepaper – Deploying high-density zones in a low-density data center

Don’t Miss

HP LogoHP shoots low with Lynnfield ProLiants

Plus Hyper-V bundles, new switch

VMware virtually crashes Windows 7 desktop party

Tempts Windows XP laggards

Neon SoftwarezPrime cost-cutting mainframeware gets traction

Neon chuffed, talking to DOJ and Brussels

UK2 dot NetDelays, password problems hit UK2 email restore

Sunday night = Monday night