Sun loses software head to Adobe

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John Loiacono, Sun's executive vice-president for software, is leaving the company to join Adobe Systems as senior vice-president of its Creative Solutions Group, ZDNet UK sister site CNET News.com has learned.

Sun confirmed the departure on Thursday and said Loiacono's last day will be March 24. Until a replacement is found, Jonathan Schwartz, Sun's president, — who held Sun's software chief role before Loiacono — will take over the job.

"We thank John for his many contributions to Sun and wish him well in his new endeavour," the company said in a statement.

Adobe is a graphics software powerhouse that sells popular titles such as PhotoShop and that acquired rival Macromedia in 2005.

Loiacono will oversee design products such as the Photoshop, Illustrator, Premiere, InDesign and Macromedia Dreamweaver, Adobe said in a statement. He will report to Adobe President Shantanu Narayen.

Loiacono, who took over as software head in 2004, oversaw radical changes that aimed to bring greater success to software produced by the Santa Clara, California-based company. Sun's server software business never produced products that achieved the popularity of rival offerings from IBM and BEA, and Solaris lost market share to Linux.

Under Loiacono, Sun first stopped charging for Solaris and then converted it into an open source project called OpenSolaris. And Java Enterprise System server software is following a similar path.

Loiacono is the second major executive to depart Sun this month. Bob MacRitchie retired from his post as head of sales and is being replaced by Don Grantham.

At the same time, though, the boomerang effect is still in force at Sun: Peder Ulander, who left Sun in 2004 for embedded Linux specialist MontaVista, will return on Monday as vice-president of software marketing. He replaces Mark McLain, who left several months earlier.

"I'm looking forward to having some fun inside of software," said Ulander, reached by phone as he was snowboarding in Idaho. "I think everything Sun is doing with open source is pretty exciting."

MontaVista is searching for a new chief executive, and Ulander said it's likely that person will want to name his own vice president of marketing. "Being a vice-president at MontaVista was a great experience, but this is a bigger opportunity," Ulander said.

Other returned execs at Sun include co-founder Andy Bechtolsheim, now a top designer of the Galaxy line of x86 servers; chief financial officer Mike Lehman, who came out of retirement; Tom Goguen, the vice president of operating platforms products; and Karen Tagan-Padir, the head of Java software development.

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