| New York, NY Worldwide
Education and Research Conference, March 7, 2006 - Sun Microsystems
Inc. (Nasdaq: SUNW) today announced the opening of its Annual Worldwide
Education and Research Conference (WWERC) in New York, March 7-9, 2006.
Building on its roots as a leading advocate of education and learning,
Sun executives will share the stage with invited speakers including Joel
Klein, Chancellor of New York City Schools, Matthew Goldstein, Chancellor
of City University of New York (CUNY), Dr. Djibril Diallo , Director United
Nations New York Office of Sport for Peace and Development, James Burke
of PBS, TV show host and science historian, among others, to discuss the
emerging and leading edge technologies being used in K-12 and higher education
to open doors and increase access to quality education.
"Sun has been hosting the WWERC for more than 20 years
in order to bring together education thought leaders to discuss the evolution
of education and the role technology plays in enhancing global learning,
teaching and research," said Kim Jones, vice president, Global Education
& Research. "Together with Sun, world leaders in education and technology
will discuss the many ways that IT skills development can enhance employee
readiness, help create communities and extend access to resources."
Sun provides technology resources and training classes
to students worldwide, creating strong educational ties within a community
to aid the enrichment of the individuals around the globe. Through these
communities Sun and its partners deliver increased access to education
and enhanced IT skills development. Significant progress has been made
on this front as shown by, Sun's formation of the non-profit Global and
Education Learning Community (GELC), aimed to improve global education
by empowering teachers, students and parents with self-paced, web based,
free and open content (curriculum resources, assessment) combined with
best practices for advancing student achievement world wide.
Sun Milestones in Global IT Skills Development and
Education
Sun Grid Grants for Education -- Sun is awarding
ten institutions the Sun Grid Education Grant for 100,000 hours of central
processing units (CPUs) each on the Sun Grid, continuing its promise to
provide 1 million CPU hours to universities. First to benefit from the
Sun Grid Education Grant program is Princeton University, which received
the grant in December 2005. The donation of 100,000 CPU hours on Sun Grid
-- using the Solaris10
Operating System (OS) -- has enabled Princeton to conduct its cutting-edge
astrophysics research at resolutions that previously were not possible
due to the costs of building the necessary computing power onsite. Today,
Sun has extended the Sun Grid Education Grant to deserving research efforts
at additional institutions including: Binghamton University, State University
of New York; Clemson University; Rutgers; Massachusetts Institute of Technology
(MIT); The State University of New Jersey; Southeastern Universities Research
Association; University of California, Santa Cruz; University of Minnesota,
Duluth; and University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Sun Grid helps customers and partners derive immediate
benefits from an open, grid-based computing infrastructure on a pay-per-use
utility basis that enables them to accelerate innovation, speed time to
results, and deploy technical applications without having to invest in
expensive IT infrastructure.
Global Education and Learning Community (GELC) Names
and Executive Director -- Sun broke new ground in free and open-source
computing in the creation of this non profit which aims to meet the needs
of students by sharing best practices globally. The group named an executive
director at the conference, Dr. Barbara "Bobbi" Kurshan, formerly President
of Educorp Consultants Corporation, and co-CEO of Core Learning Group,
Private Equity Fund. The director will lead an advisory board with representatives
from nearly every continent to extend the vision for this group. The GELC
Executive Director directs all activities of the GELC, including managing
the various working groups, monitoring technical developments, overseeing
the education community process, managing the creation of GELC specifications
and representing the GELC to external organizations.
Solaris 10 University Challenge - Announced during
EduCause 2005, Sun extended an opportunity for student developers and
others at universities to develop projects based on Solaris 10, the most
advanced operating system on the planet, and OpenSolaris(TM), Sun's open
source project for Solaris. The winner will receive cash and Sun technology
and their university will receive a retail value credit up to $100,000
towards the purchase of Sun technology. Submissions are due by June 10,
2006. For eligibility requirements and more information, please visit:
www.sun.com/solaris10universitychallenge.
Featured Sun Speakers include:
- Scott McNealy, Chairman and CEO
- John Fowler, Executive Vice President, Network Systems Group
- John Gage, Chief Researcher and Director of the Science Office
- James Gosling, Vice President and Sun Fellow
- Kim Jones, Vice President of Global Education and Research
- Randy Kerns, Vice President, Data Management Group
- Greg Papadopoulos, Executive Vice President and Chief Technology
Officer
- Ingrid Van Den Hoogen, Senior Vice President, Brand, Global Communications
and Marketing
- David W. Yen, Executive Vice President, Scalable Systems Group
Additional Featured Speakers:
- Curtiss Barnes, Senior Director Product Strategy - Education and
Research, Oracle
- James Burke, Science Historian, Author and TV Host
- Dr. Robert A. Cecil, Ph.D.
- Dr. Djibril Diallo, Director United Nations New York Office of Sport
for Peace and Development
- Matthew Goldstein, Chancellor, City University of New York
- Joel I. Klein, Chancellor, New York City Department of Education
- Hede Nonaka, Vice President Marketing Division, Ricoh U.S./Ricoh
Corporation
- David Swartz, Vice President and CIO, The George Washington University
- Dr. Arthur Toga, Professor of Neurology, UCLA
- Jimmy Wales, Founder and President, Wikimedia Foundation
About Sun Microsystems, Inc.
A singular vision -- "The Network Is
The Computer" -- guides Sun in the development of technologies that power
the world's most important markets. Sun's philosophy of sharing innovation
and building communities is at the forefront of the next wave of computing:
the Participation Age. Sun can be found in more than 100 countries and
on the Web at http://sun.com
or the Asia South website at http://sun.com.sg.
Sun, Sun Microsystems, the Sun logo,
Solaris, StarOffice, Sun Fire, Sun Ray, Java and The Network is The Computer
are trademarks or registered trademarks of Sun Microsystems, Inc. in the
United States and in other countries.
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| Press Contacts :
Kelly Long
Sun Microsystems, Asia South
Tel: (65) 62397092
Email: Contact by E-mail
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