Will Open Source Solaris Kill Linux?
Scott_Blayney writes "This guy contends that now that Sun is releasing Solaris 10 under an open source license, Linux will begin to wane in popularity. To quote, "Linux will probably not grow much beyond its current market share of about 10 % leaving Red Hat and especially Novell with a big problem."
"
"Will Open Source Solaris Kill Linux?"
No.
dmiessler.com -- grep understanding knowledge
If Sun continues to support it with their engineers, and IBM continues to support Linux with Their engineers, it will still be a battle. I do not look for either side to gain much ground, (netcraft aside.)
Have you Meta Moderated t
Doesn't Linux support a vastly large collection of hardware than Solaris? Also, Linux isn't just popular because of its open-source nature, but also the philosophy behind its design and development, as well as the number of professionals behind it. I don't see the NSA donating to Solaris, now do I see most of europe backing Linux.
I haven't RTFA yet so please correct me if I'm wrong.
If you like what I've said here, and want to read more, go to http://www.krillrblog.com
Short answer: No.
Long answer: No.
If you're Sun: Yes.
Couple of false assumptions in the guys story. Typical when suits try to make tech decisions, especially when they are fool enough to believe their LACK of knowledge makes them more qualified, as this guy does.
A few of the obvious clues missed are:
1) Linux is already ahead of Solaris on Intel hardware, not behind as this guy believes from reading Sun press releases.
2) Solaris is not known to be portable beyond Sparc, Sparc64 and ia32. ia64 and AMD64/x86-64 might happen but as far as I know don't yet exist.
3) Sun has yet to announce a license for Solaris, it is very doubtful it will be actual Open Source and almost certainly not Free Software in the FSF sense of the term.
4) Sun is almost certain to keep parts totally closed due to licensing terms with third party suppliers.
5) Sun will rig things to retain ALL creative control from the Java experience. This will preclude any sort of community involvement on the scale needed to compete with Linux.
Democrat delenda est
Nor me. If Solaris really did go open source the way most people understand it, the useful bits of code would find it's way into all the various Linux distributions in pretty short order.
As a Linux user, I would also like to see Linux continue to do well. I think there's enough room enough out there for all of us.
"Can't we all just get along?!?"
i'll go install it on my sharp zaurus. what's the url for the arm solaris distro?
right.
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For one thing, Linux is now as much a "brand" as Solaris. And there are too many people making difefrent distros for Linux to really wane for some time.
But also, consider what "Open Source" really means. I'm not familiar with what OS licence Sun is using, but if it's really "Open" then Linux can make use of the best bits to keep going. If it's not really that "Open" then the current forces that move Linux will continue the course unchanged.
In a world that already has BSD and Linux living together in harmony (well, as much harmony as a VI and Emacs user sharing the same house) there is also room, and a place, for Solaris.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Why does one have to 'kill' the other? Why can't they stay in a state of equilibrium goading each other to improve?
Why do people always assume one product has to erradicate all the competition and become the only product of it's type.
----
That having been said, Sun has some relly nice hardware at the high end of the scale. I don't expect that to change in the near future.
Sun is just roadkill on Linux's crusade to take out Microsoft.
Free Software: Like love, it grows best when given away.
Solaris couldn't kick linux out of every possible niche (embedded wagoo 3sx-12 cpus or whatnot), it could cream it on the desktop.
Sun will throw all its muscle behind it's Java Desktop to deliver a polished, cohisive system. Linux will continue to be pulled in 100 directions at once.
Distros need to stop offering Gnome, KDE, fluxbox, and 9000 other window managers, and pick a path and stick to it.
There really isn't that much of a market for people who like to dick around with 10000 different ways to close a window, each with it's own myriad of quirks and bugs. They like to plug it in, turn it on, and have it work pretty much the same way as the one in the next cubicle, or the next building.
Linux' strength (versatility) is it's achilles heel when it comes to the desktop market.
I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
The Solaris software is of proven quality and at least equal or better then Linux and the open source model will assure that it stays up there.
Even giving him the first half of his argument (which is debatable), just becasue an OS is open source doesn't mean it's going to grow as fast as Linux. Leadership and general community interest is a HUGE part of the picture. Hurd anyone?
Sun with Solaris has already a large installed base and by becoming free and open source there is no reason for existing Solaris users to switch to Linux.
Ah I see, so being open source is the only edge that Linux has over the competition. Hmmmm.
Sun has a proven reputation in terms of quality of support. This should be at least as good or better then that of the Linux supporters.
I can't really speak to this, never worked with Sun's support.
Because Sun by default is the only designated party managing the open source software, there will be no risk of a version bonanza with multiple incompatible versions.
I think this is much a negative as a positive. "Becasue Sun is by default the only designated party managing the open source software, you might be stuck with what they think is best." After all we know Sun has a great track record with managing semi-open projects in the past, right? (Java...)
Laugh at stupidity: mod idiots +1 Funny.
They are only makeing the core Open source, like Darwin, Linux still has a much greater Application base to draw from and keep it going. When Doom3 does Solaris, then panic.
There was an unknown error in the submission.
If Solaris had done this TEN YEARS AGO, then maybe. As things stand today, no. It comes down to a matter of trust. Do most Linux users trust Solaris enough to let go of Linux? No.
Take a choice between A and B. A is commonly considered a better product than B. Most will choose A. But B offers something that A has never dreamed of. In fact, A hates the idea of offering what B offers. B gains a lot of support. Time ticks by, and after seeing how much B has benefitted A changes it's mind and offers something similar to what B offers - but only because it has to.
Do all those people who would have originally chosen A, but chose B go back to A? NO. Because B is of a similar mindset to the choosers. B WANTS to offer things to the chooser. A offers because it has to remain competitive. That is HUGE. And that is why Solaris will not kill Linux.
P.S. A is not necessarily better than B.
Slashdot Syndrome: the sudden, extreme urge to correct someone in order to validate one's self.
Since when has a programmer enthusiastically dropped their own code to pick up someone elses? Not a technical person, yeah, obviously. =)
How many architechures does Solaris support? Sparc and x86? Is that all?
How many does Linux support?
Don't ping my cheese with your bandwidth!
We've been using the beta of 10 for about 3 months now in testing with Oracle at our site. It's pretty, that's for sure, with it's nice Gnome facelift and all, but I think essentially that Linux and Solaris fill different roles, at least for us.
.... once .... in a lab... and it isn't reproducable to the average joe...
Linux feels a lot more like a general purpose OS than Solaris, and 10 while friendlier is still very much rooted in the proprietary Solaris tradition.
To sum it up, this is good for Solaris users who can throw away the whole CDE/Openwin experience and replace it with something refreshingly cleaner, however we were going to adopt 10 anyway. It seems to me that Sun is going to have to really dig and build new things rather than merely say 'hey we're OSS now too!' and expect Linux users to suddenly flock their way.
Looking Glass is an excellent example of software people could see as a reason to change platforms, and IMHO Sun should focus on this type of admittedly risky innovation instead of attempting to lure existing Linux users into a Solaris world. Someday, all these marketing guys are going to realize that there's more to an OS than just a name, and that actually creating something new is the best approach to picking up market share (OSX == good example).
All that said, ZFS is a really cool thing if it works as spec'd, however ZFS is NOT in open beta AFAIK, and it has not been released to us little guy partners as of yet (though I'm betting they've started testing at the larger shops), so all we have here to go on so far is a marketing claim of improved i/o that could be true, false, or in that grey area salespeople like to use where the whole thing ran great!
I'm guessing we'll all know in about 2 months.
-chitlenz
Imagination is the silver lining of Intelligence.
I've looked around and can't find what kind of license Solaris 10 is under. The only way I figured I can is to register with Sun, download it, and view the license, but I don't want to do that as I don't intend on using it. Perhaps this speaks something on its own. I can download the linux kernel all over the net and I don't have to register for it to boot.
I guess I don't see this as cut-and-dry as Mr. Ottnik is making it out to be.
Also, can I hack Solaris, write drivers, or port Solaris 10 to whatever platform I want? Can I even get the source? (Again, I don't have the license and I'm generally clueless about Solaris.)
:wq
As anyone who's tried out x86 Solaris is aware; it's no match for Linux on the platform - or any other platform other than Sun's own hardware for that matter. The hardware support is pretty dire. Sure, it's supposedly a superior kernel, but if it's unable to take advantage of the metal underneath it, then it's not going to win market share.
;-)
(yes I have tried it out, and it lasted a full week before I threw up my hands in disappointment and went back to the penguin
Code, Hardware, stuff like that.
??? First of all, why should Linus pick a GUI? He's the head of the kernel development, not a distribution vendor.
And as for a desktop linux fork, that also makes no sense. There are lots of desktop distributions (SUSE, Knoppix, etc). There are no reasons to fork the kernel for desktop use. If the distribution vendor doesn't want RAID, SCSI, etc, they can just configure them out.
You mean like stability, security, efficiency, etc? Using a recent distribution is no more difficult for home and office users than using windows or MacOSX. Installing it may be annoying, but few home users do that with windows anyways. Most get it with their computer or use the restore disk that came with the computer.
Seriously... although it may well be plausable that a good number of places which once would have installed a free Linux will now instead install a free Solaris x86, everyone knows good and well that even that scenario wouldn't "kill" Linux.
Depending on how "open" Solaris code turns out to be, it's success may indeed make all of Open Source stronger, prompting more companies to follow suit, releasing their core products under some sort of Open Source license and placing more engineers on open-source-based projects.
In any event, it's going to take a lot more than a free and open Solaris to "kill" Linux. Seriously, show me the Solaris fanatics... I haven't seen them. The Linux fanatics, on the other hand, are everywhere... and as long as they are alive, Linux will be alive as well. Which is a good thing.
You can be sure they'll make damn sure the license is incompatible with the GPL.
The one GUI-related thing I think Linus ought to help with would be a UNIFIED, distro, toolkit, and desktop environment independent hardware control panel. It seems to me that Linus + Freedesktop.org + Linux Standard Base is what would be required for "the Linux Desktop" to be widely accepted.
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
"He's basically lost most of his credibility there, because a good decision maker needs to bring in technical people to explain this."
To me he lost his credibility by talking about an open source solaris before such a thing even exists. Why don't we wait till sun actually open sources solaris, examine the license, examine what had to be taken out due to licensing, examine what sun says about suing people who may be reading patented code and THEN start speculating about how it will all effect linux.
For example if SUN releases solaris under GPL no problem. Linux will take from it and improve itself. If it's under the BSD-like the same thing will occur. If it's released under something like the Java license I don't expect them to build a decent community or to present any real competition to linux.
evil is as evil does
That's just dumb. Open sourcing Solaris won't automagically make it more popular than Linux.
Besides, this is Sun we're talking about. I bet it won't be an OSI-approved license and therefore will only be considered open source "because Sun tells you it is" (familiar?).
Linux is strong because it's a worldwide community effort where both individuals and companies are welcome to participate.
Meanwhile, the open source Solaris will remain tightly controlled by Sun, and therefore will only go in the direction Sun wants it to (forks may happen, but their chances of survival are very low). Sun never really cared about the "community" and you can bet open sourcing Solaris won't change that.
I really doubt Solaris represents much of a threat to Linux. Linux has been going for over ten years, and has built up a great amount of momentum; developers aren't just going to switch from coding for their operating system of choice to work on an unfamiliar Solaris. There isn't enough incentive.
Whilst I'm sure Solaris will attract some attention, I'd guess that the majority of developers will stick with the operating system they know. Whilst Sun can throw a lot of weight behind this project, it's easier to keep an open source project moving along at speed, than it is to start a new one. I'm skeptical as to whether open-source Solaris can attract the developer attention that Linux has.
Whilst businesses are pretty much free to choose what they want, the writer seems to be suggesting that because Solaris is open source, that will somehow make it magically better. Businesses are not usually known for choosing software simply because it is open source. Unfortunately, just making a product open source is not an automatic recipe for success, otherwise Hurd would garner just as much attention as Linux.
"Let me start by saying that I'm not a technical expert. Although this might be a handicap it could very well be a positive in looking at the issue of Sun versus Linux in the server business from a decision maker's point of view."
Okay! Let me play the headline-reading-suit game then:
"Sun? Isn't that the company that used to make servers, then imploded and got rid of all their R&D? And now they're so desperate that they're going 'Open Source'? Wow. Sounds like death spiral-hype to me. We'll stay with Red Hat."
Whoa... Are you suggesting a Linux civil war by forking the kernel for specific needs?
Well, so far the kernel hasn't been forked. The BSD kernel has been forked a bunch of times, and look at it. It's got a set of developers here, a set there, another set over there. Now, think what BSD would be like if you had all those people working together? Not only is OpenBSD a "distro" of BSD, it's got it's whole own kernel. Is that a bonus? Personally, I don't think so.
But then again, what are the special needs of the kernel for the desktop? Like I said before, I think the kernel has everything it needs (except maybe for fully hotpluggable PCMCIA cards) to go to the desktop. It's the user interface software that's the problem.
Tell the truth and you won't have so much to remember.
Wow almost word for word what I heard a higher up saying earlier. Seriously, anyone who's running a Red Hat shop knows how pleasing it is and how good Red Hat support is. I can only assume Novell is similar. Sun's support on the the other hand... is well less than desirable. Linux is superior in many ways to Solaris, no need for any one to switch now and there won't be a need in the future. Just like Mozilla is now a better brand name to be associated with then Netscape, Linux has better mind share then Solaris. It is whats in and the corporate folk want it.
Regards,
Steve
Most of the comments I've see so far are essentially "No." I disagree, but before I do so I'll make the following assumptions:
a) Sun uses a real open source license - meaning GPL compatible. This is unlikely, and if they don't Linux isn't going anywhere.
b) Sun doesn't reserve major high end components of the system. If they do, they are essentially another Linux with different and unfamiliar source code. Solaris can do some things well that Linux isn't good at, but if Sun cuts it down, game over. Open source Solaris is a non-starter.
NOW, let's assume they do it the Right Way. Several things immediately happen. Solaris has a good track record in high end servers that has been earned through experience. That gives it a lot of interest right there. Now, with real open source, drivers from Linux start arriving in droves. Intel performance is improved. GNU tools become standard parts of the system at almost all levels. Solaris becomes a more robust Linux, with a proven commercial track record.
Now, remember - to everyone above kernel level, KDE on Linux vs. KDE on Open Solaris is going to look VERY similar. Ditto for any other user (and even most developer) tools. Parts of Solaris that annoy users suddenly are fixable, and get fixed. Open Solaris can now go head to head with Linux, as a tier one platform for virtually all open source applications.
The parts of Linux that are not available in Solaris will be adsorbed in. Things like Dtrace are already available on Solaris, and not available on Linux. As people rapidly add in the goodies, Solaris adsorbs Linux's strengths (drivers, file systems, etc.) while leveraging Solaris's robust, tested, industry strength core. As far as I know, there is very little about Linux to fundamentally recommend it over Solaris, except for it's ability to function well on many platforms. If Solaris proves able to do this (impossible to say right now, but I'm assuming well done code will be able to do this, given enough eyes and hours) Linux will essentially dissolve into Solaris, and the end product will be Open Solaris with the best parts of Linux preserved. Does that constitute killing Linux? I wouldn't say so. If you mean will Linus stop being the prime mover, maybe, but the effort put into Linux will survive.
So I, for one, would welcome our GPL Solaris overlords, because the only thing that will happen is net gains all around, regardless of whether the end product is called Solaris or Linux.
Now, do I believe Sun will Do It Right? Nope. But I sure hope they do.
"I object to doing things that computers can do." -- Olin Shivers, lispers.org
All of the hardware detection problems are solved simply in other existing systems (Open/NetBSD). Why does everyone want a new, complicated solution to a problem that already been solved by someone else?
The answer is simple: This is Linux.
The explanation is a longer one, of course: Linux has a very long tradition of solving things, that have already been solved, a different way.
The scheduler, the vm (all versions), the driver interface (if you will call it such) have all been reimplementations of things, that have already been done. And most of the Linux reimplementations also reimplemented and gradually removed the errors the predecessors have made in their course of development. On such perspective Linux is in some terms a step-by-step view on the developers learning how to do something. And sometimes they learn something, somebody else already knew for a long time and sometimes they just get it wrong again.
It probably is a great deal because of developers wanting to leave their fingerprints, doing things their way and not giving up their freedom. Whatever the reasons behind this are, the traditional Linux way of doing things is to do things different. Guess, why Linux 2.6 drivers aren't IOKit compatible ...
The author starts the article by declaring "Let me start by saying that I'm not a technical expert. Although this might be a handicap it could very well be a positive in looking at the issue of Sun versus Linux in the server business from a decision maker's point of view." He's basically lost most of his credibility there, because a good decision maker needs to bring in technical people to explain this.
I'd say all, because if he isn't a technical person he frankly doesn't understand what Solaris and Linux do. If he doesn't understand what they do he has no capacity to understand which one will do better at it.
Open source isn't some kind of magical fairy dust. It's a hell of a good development model and it can bring success to products that might not have gotten it otherwise but it does not equate to instant success.
This guy thinks of open source as magical fairy dust. Becuase he is not a "technical person" (in other words, because he is not informed) he thinks, hey, Solaris has these advantages, and Linux was open source, therefore Linux has been doing well becuase Linux is open source.
This is not accurate. Linux has been doing well for a great many reasons. Many of these are byproducts of the fact that Linux is open source. But open source is not the reason. Frankly, Solaris's customers don't care if it is open source. They want a good cost to performance ratio. They want their administrators to be easy to find and efficient. Linux provided both of these things. Solaris does not. This is why Solaris's customers have been leaving for Linux in droves. Not because Linux is "free"; becuase Linux is quality.
Perhaps this guy thinks that these "technical" matters don't matter because Solaris will succeed where Linux did not (the Desktop). There isn't much good reason to believe this. Sun has no history of creating end-user software. They have a bunch of money but other than that they're no more likely to mysteriously produce The Great American Desktop OS than, I don't know, Novell, or Nabisco. Creating a usable desktop system is hard. Creating a usable desktop system from a starting point made out of old, server-oriented software (such as the Linux or Solaris platforms) is almost even harder.
I remember a similar problem with Microsoft CRM. The idea of Microsoft making a CRM product rocked hardcore to those in a Microsoft Office environment with Great Plains products abound. The execution was terrible, and now it's an embarassment.
People LOVED the idea of Microsoft CRM. Solaris people are going to LOVE the idea of Open Source Solaris. But does anyone really believe Sun is going to do this right? Moreover, what would be the right way to take an existing commercial server product, open it up, and find a way to make more money off of it?
Perhaps if this move is successful, Sun would start abandoning hardware, and move towards a more services-based company - like the transition IBM started 2 years ago?
That's not how most people understand open source. :-P
It's not important how people understand it. It's important that people respect the requests of an author (which is in short what a liscense is.)
If Sun cocks up some ELUA that is incompatible with the GPL and nobody pays any attention to it under the argument that it's not ethical, not fair, or even that ELUAs themselves are not valid, then the GPL itself means nothing to anyone by that very same argument.
If Sun makes a liscense that is incompatible with the GPL, then so be it. Linux has done just fine without Sun this long, and they can go on without them.
I see this more of an act of desperation on the behalf of Sun anyway.
IF Solaris is open sourced under a real libre licence, and IF it manages to offer real accesible features that are a major improvment over GNU/Linux, then mabey it will be the next big thing, however I doubt it, but more important what does it matter? The important thing is the licence, I don't care if a Sun idependent libre Solaris "wins" or GNU/Linux does, it doesn't matter as in this highly unlikly senario they are both libre software wich is the important part not the name.
I think that we've been arguing from a fallacious standpoint. The purpose of being public domain is to make systems interoperable and to benefit from the intellectual efforts of other open source ventures.
A simple question: Why?
For anyone who has used the Solaris operating systems knows that there are many non-POSIX compliant and fairly obsolete programs packaged with the OS. To speak frankly, I have not used Solaris 9, but find it unlikely that they have been able to reproduce all of the GNU created features and improvements, nor would they want to.
Sure, they have a slew of Sun proprietary applications for such things as security management, their own filesystem with logging/journaling, and gobs of support from other vendors such as Oracle, but they are falling far behind the open source community in the areas of system useability and interoperability. Anyone who has tried to conduct simple administrative tasks and write some shell scripts finds annoying differences in basic commands. Those programs that are ported from the GNU community lag farther behind than needed.
Going open source has benefits. Sun is releasing this as an open source project so that their operating system can benefit by the incorporation of GNU licenced software. They will be able to concentrate development effort on their core technology while reaping the benefits of GNU technology.
Benefits for Linux
All of those great proprietary applications that I mentioned above are going to either be directly available for porting (a la Open Source), or much easier for Sun to port for other systems. This improves the number and potentially the quality of Linux management applications.
Solaris is a Unix. This cannot be bad for Linux. Interoperability is one of the key problems with Unix/Linux. Another Unix system joining the Open Source efforts will provide another choice for consumers and provide collaborative potential with existing Linux projects.
In brief
Another significant open source operating system on the market is good for everybody!
Sun doesn't get it. Their sense of open source only works when you write FOSS like this: F|=O$$.
As said before:
1) no Solaris on a mobile phone
2) no Solaris on a laptop/notebook/pda
3) no Solaris on a media centre
4) no Solaris in an automotive ECM, and so on.
I've talked to their PR people, and Sun engineers. They DON'T get it. Their idea of community is a country club. It's stockholder interests that they have at heart. That's ok.
What's not ok is to make believe that they're going to get Linux Love by putting on a blond wig and some lipstick.
---- Teach Peace. It's Cheaper Than War.
What SUN and many others miss is that the most compelling thing about linux and linux distributions isnt the system in itself, its the license its released under. The GPL license is a protection against malicious corporations and what prevents anybody from gaining strangelhold. It forces corporations to work together with the users in a never before seen way. I and many with me will not migrate to a license that makes it possible for SUN to just rip the floor from under our feet in five years time. Even a GPL license will be very scrutinized so that all the bases are covered and not just some parts of the system.
I think they put all to much weight into peoples cheapness and think that GNU/linux is all about money. Well a big part of the money bit is to not let anyone lock you in like MS did. I find this a desperate move from SUN who cant decide what leg to stand on. MS is sure to be happy to have one single entity to crush if SUN should gain foothold with Solaris. With linux its just not possible to stomp it out in one blow.
HTTP/1.1 400
Redhat != linux, GPL != Open Source....blah blah blah.
Well, the site's been slashdotted...
Linux isn't about the OS, it's about the community. At this late date, could any kind of realistic Open Source Solaris get the kind of mindshare Linux has among the people who are in a position to do something useful with it?
The Linux distros only had a year or two community-growth head start over the BSD releases, for example, and BSD was much further ahead of Linux technically... but Linus had the right formula and Linux took off.
Now the distance between Red Hat or Suse and Solaris is much less, and Linux has been growing as an open source OS for a decade and change... I don't see any reason to worry about an Open Source Solaris kicking its butt.
Give me a break. The minute Sun open sources Solaris the ubergeeks will be all over the code picking out the high valued features. Those will be patched into Linux. Usable improvements from Linux (which one could presume is a motivation for open sourcing Solaris) will be patched into Solaris...looks like an OS hypertransport effect to me.
I've used (in the last 6 months) all of:
- HP-UX (on PA)
- AIX
- Solaris (Sparc)
- RHEL3AS (x86)
- Gentoo (amd64)
for extended periods of time.Of those 5, the only one which stands out is Solaris. Why? Because every other OS has a package-management scheme that actually works. SAM, SMIT, RPM and portage are all pretty good. pkgadd and friends are the dumbest things ever. For instance: why is it that when you've just installed everything from a location it prompts you with the list of installable packages again? What possible use does it serve?
Most of systems administration these days is in the package management - installing patches and new software. Life's too short for pkgadd.
If you want a supported UNIX, do yourself a favour and get an eServer p5 running AIX. Sun dropped out of the performance war some time ago, and HP's Itanium 2 systems now seem to be struggling to catch the POWER5.
Phil
PS: If you must run Solaris, for pity's sake run it on a Fujitsu rather than a Sun box. Cheaper, faster, and still supported; what's not to like?
I guess today is a passable day to die.
- If they go really GPL-ish, SUN code will be used to improve Linux even further. Ergo: Linux will grow.
- If they don't, they will not get a decent developer base. They win nothing. Ergo: Linux will grow.
Sounds like a no-lose situation for Linux IMHO...
Solaris will never replace linux. Solaris and linux should not even be compared. Sun is a hardware co., they want to sell more hardware. That is why they are giving away their little solaris build. Solaris sux on intel based systems, always has, always will. Not to mention the lack of support/drivers available for any hardware build that isn't from Sun. Linux on the other hand is at home on the most dominent computer builds in the world and getting better.
You say that Linux wins because it is disposable(free)... Well, an 'open source' solaris is the same thing. A free solaris. You will get the same level(nul / community-based) support with disposable linux.
Sparc/Solaris underperform? On sparc hardware, maybe, sure. But there are some badass features on sparc that just can't be touched by x86. They are two different markets, as always. Sparc is for the enterprise class where 1(or 1+1) server is there and it is the shiznit and it will not(can not) go down. X86 can be the highend, but more in cluster form, where the redundancy of multiple boxes gives you the advantages of the sparc's pricetag and features.
The jab at apple prices, coming from a supposed ISP on the scale you hinted at makes me want to call bullshit. Paying a couple hundred, or thousand(or tens of thousands, depending on the situation), more for a more reliable, more robust, better supported box just makes sense. period. This is PRECISELY the difference in initial cost verse total cost.
Yes, apple hardware is more expensive in many cases. However, that price is (arguably) justified with the pre-bundled software, quality of the components, integration of the system and overall usability of the device. How is that so hard to understand? Is it the best deal for everyone? No. Neither is a lowend Dell box. Is it a legitment competitor that DOES have price points that at times are equal or lower than a comparable Dell machine? YES.
The same is true of Sun. Which, by the way, does sell lowend amd64 boxes with Redhat Linux, if you so choose.
Here's his list of reasons, and my comments on them (I'm a java and Oracle developer working on large UK projects)...
Why will the Open Source model automatically work? The majority of developers are already on Linux work and will have to be attracted to move across. Sun has had limited success in fostering support in the community so far.
Only applies to people already using Solaris. What about new deployments? I suggest that many SMBs will adopt Linux as (1) it'll work on a low-power machine and (2) their techies will suggest it!
Again, this only applies to people already using Solaris.
That's a serious judgement call there. Plus from what I read, this isn't necessarily true even if it 'should' be!
In short, I don't think this article was worth my time rebutting it. Oh...
Justin.
You're only jealous cos the little penguins are talking to me.
Have you tried installing Solaris on x86 hardware? Good luck finding hardware that works. Maybe with an open-source version more drivers will be written, but right now Linux has the advantage on hardware compatibility over Solaris (and BSD).