Scott McNealy

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Scott McNealy
Born November 13, 1954 (1954-11-13) (age 53)
Flag of the United States Columbus, Indiana
Occupation Chairman and Co-Founder,
Sun Microsystems
Chairman of Sun Federal, Inc.
Website
Sun Microsystems Official Scott McNealy bio

Scott McNealy (b. November 13, 1954, Columbus, Indiana) is the Chairman of Sun Microsystems, the computer technology company he co-founded in 1982 along with Vinod Khosla, Bill Joy, and Andy Bechtolsheim.

Sun Microsystems, along with companies such as Silicon Graphics, 3Com, and Oracle Corporation, was part of a wave of successful startup companies in California's Silicon Valley during the early and mid-1980s. In 1982, McNealy was approached by fellow Stanford alum Khosla to help provide the necessary organizational and business leadership for the fledgling company. The name "Sun" was derived from Bechtolsheim's original SUN (Stanford University Network) computer project.[1]

In 1984, McNealy took over the CEO role from Khosla, who would ultimately leave the company in 1985. On 24 April 2006, McNealy stepped down as CEO after serving in that position for 22 years, and turned the job over to Jonathan Schwartz. McNealy is one of the few CEOs of a major corporation to have had a tenure of over twenty years.

Unlike most people involved in high technology industries, Scott McNealy did not come from the world of amateur programmers, hackers, and computer scientists. Instead, his background is in business, having graduated from Harvard University with a Bachelor of Arts in Economics. He received his MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business.

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[edit] Personal life

McNealy is married, and has four sons: Maverick, Dakota, Colt, and Scout. He is known to be an enthusiastic ice hockey player and has been ranked as one of the best golfers in executive ranks; McNealy has self-deprecatingly referred to himself as a "golf major" who wound up running a high-tech business.[2] He is a self-described libertarian. [3]

[edit] Positions at Sun

  • Chairman of the Board of Directors since April 2006
  • Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer from April 2004 to April 2006
  • Chairman of the Board of Directors, President and Chief Executive Officer from July 2002 to April 2004
  • Chairman of the Board of Directors and Chief Executive Officer from April 1999 to June 2002
  • Chairman of the Board of Directors, President and Chief Executive Officer from December 1984 to April 1999
  • President and Chief Operating Officer from February 1984 to December 1984
  • Vice President of Operations from February 1982 to February 1984

[edit] Sun’s motto: “The Network is the Computer”

McNealy was an early advocate of the networked environment. At times, he has been known to be skeptical of products that do not integrate well with networked environments.

One example McNealy has given involved the Apple iPod. As quoted in the The Register, McNealy said, “There’s a pendulum thing where stuff is on the client side and then goes back into the network where it belongs”, the magazine quoted him as saying. “The answering machine put voicemail by the desk, and then it went back into the network.” He continued, “Your iPod is like your home answering machine. I guarantee you it will be hard to sell an iPod five or seven years from now when every cell phone can access your entire music library wherever you are.”

The Register offered its own rejoinder to McNealy’s comment in the same article: “Well, sure. Unless your iPod is your cell phone.”[4]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Brent Schlender (October 13, 1997). JAVAMAN THE ADVENTURES OF SCOTT MCNEALY TODAY'S EPISODE HIS FIGHT TO SAVE THE WORLD WIDE WEB FROM THE EVIL EMPIRE. Fortune Magazine. Retrieved on 2008-03-17. “They called their box the SUN--for Stanford University Network--workstation. The investor was intrigued; within a month, Sun Microsystems was born.”
  2. ^ John Steinbreder (June 1998). "Handicapping America's CEOs". Golf Digest. “Scott McNealy, CEO of Sun Microsystems, once quipped: 'Am I a computer scientist? No, I'm a golf major.' A former captain of the Harvard golf team, he now plays to a 3.2 Handicap Index -- lowest of any top executive.” 
  3. ^ On the Record: Scott McNealy. San Francisco Chronicle (September 14, 2003).
  4. ^ Vance, Ashlee (January 12, 2006). Sun and Apple almost merged three times - Bill Joy. The Register.

[edit] External links

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Preceded by
Vinod Khosla
CEO of Sun Microsystems
1984 - 2006
Succeeded by
Jonathan Schwartz
Preceded by
Owen Brown
President of Sun Microsystems
1984 - 1999
2002 - 2004
Succeeded by
Edward Zander
Preceded by
Edward Zander
Succeeded by
Jonathan Schwartz
Preceded by
Vinod Khosla
Chairman of Sun Microsystems
1984 - present
Incumbent