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User: christophersaul

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  1. Re:Intel is losing it's edge on Itanium Will Only Be Partly Supported by Longhorn · · Score: 1

    Well said, because we all know Sun doesn't actively sell and promote a version of its own OS for x86 and x64 and doesn't sell Opteron kit.

  2. Re:This could have been done by one person on Six Bomb Blasts Around Central London · · Score: 1

    Why do you assume the bomber's a 'she'?

  3. Re:linux distro is Move? on Test Driving Linux · · Score: 1

    I think you're missing the point of the article. Non technical users who have heard about Linux and would like to try it out in an easy fashion are harly likely to purchase Virtual PC and burn CDs from multiplt distros.

  4. It's 'Sun Ray' not 'SunRay' on Sun to Acquire Tarantella · · Score: 1

    Sorry to be a pedant, but I had to say it.

  5. Re:Stuff that matters on Sun Developers Refute OpenSolaris Vaporware Claims · · Score: 1

    And while you were working on it, you could listen to all the moaners at Slashdot telling you to open source it as it would be a good idea.

  6. Re:Leave it to a PC mag to not know... on A Comprehensive Look at Solaris 10 · · Score: 1

    >Solaris 9 did not have a journaled file system. >Often, my hard drive got fsck'ed up by power >outtage and I had to spend hours of research to >fix the issue. I don't know about solaris 10.

    Solaris from 8 onwards has had a journaliing filesystem. Just add 'logging' to /etc/vfstab. Why didn't you get a UPS? Why did you have to spend hours of research the second time it happened? Didn't you remember what to do, or write it down somewhere?

    >Default shell sucks big time compared to bash >that has the super cool readline and other >features. Bash can be installed, but it does not >come by default.

    Yawn, Bash has been part of the default install for ages. Just change to Bash if that's what you want.

    >Does not have a compiler available by default >(you have to pay to use cc). You have to download >and install gcc. Gcc also comes in the extra cds

    So install it. What's the problem?

    >CDE plain an simply sucks. Both KDE and Gnome are >light years ahead of it.

    So use KDE or Gnome, which have been available for Solaris for ages.

    >Try to configure a modem for ppp (I did it). It >is like trying to teach calculus to a chimpanzee.

    Hardly. Read the docs and get it working.

    >Anything related to hardware means editing ton of >text files and it seems to be designed to be as >complicated as posible. Gentoo installation >procedure is kids play compared to the modem >thing. Sound cards, video cards, printers, they >are all as hard as it gets (if they even work).

    Ah, so you want to use Solaris as a desktop OS. Fair enough, it's not been easy. It's better with 10, but that's never been Solaris' focus, so I thing you're whingeing a bit too much, frankly.

  7. Re:How good a Solaris admin are you? on Where Is Sun Going With Linux? · · Score: 1

    Apache's been included since Solaris 8.

    If you want to maintain the packages easily, you can use the open source pkg-get tool for Solaris.

  8. Re:No surprise here... on Is Sun Turning against Linux and Red Hat? · · Score: 1

    Different machines. A V880 (UIII) or a V890(UIV) would be priced similarly to the 570C.

    The principle difference is the 4800's ability to do hardware domains.

    The stuff about the pSeries running Linux always raises the question 'so what'? What apps are availablle on Linxu for the pSeries that justify buying a pSeries? If it's OSS stuff, you'd run it on x86/Opteron.

  9. Re:Sun vs. Everybody on Is Sun Turning against Linux and Red Hat? · · Score: 1

    Why is everyone insisting Sun is 'partnering' with MS? They settled a lawsuit, which meant Sun being paid 2 billion. As part of the settlement, they agreed to co-operate on things that customers are asking for - such as Active Directory integration with Sun's LDAP server. You make it sound like Bill Gates promised a Sparc version of Windows.

  10. Re:No surprise here... on Is Sun Turning against Linux and Red Hat? · · Score: 1

    No he can't, because it's an off the cuff, glib remark that goes down well because someone thinks someone else is anti-Linux.

  11. Re:No surprise here... on Is Sun Turning against Linux and Red Hat? · · Score: 1

    Not quite.

    Sun=Solaris/Sparc for systems where your app is on Solaris/Sparc and/or you need to scale to many CPUs within one system.

    Sun=Solaris/AMD or Linux/AMD or whatever you want to put on it for their AMD systems.

    Regarding Itanium, they'd have economies of scale if anyone were actually buying the things. They aren't.

  12. A Solaris kernel engineer's perspective on Is Sun Turning against Linux and Red Hat? · · Score: 3, Informative

    http://blogs.sun.com/roller/trackback/eschrock/Web log/analysts_on_opensolaris

    This guy's blog puts things nicely in perspective. Some excellent points.

  13. Re:Solaris Vs Linux? on Solaris 10 to be Open Source · · Score: 1

    Can anyone explain why someone might choose Solaris over Linux, other than for the fact that it's vastly more scalable, better supported, better documented and has a huge number of commercial, fully supported applications available, as well as being able to run all the OSS stuff out there, as well as having a massive install base and a tonne of experienced systems admininstrators with a multi-billion dollar company's bacing, a company who also support the hardware it runs on and as well as having a tonne of features not fully or decently implemented in Linux?

  14. Re:Why do this? on Linux Apps On Solaris · · Score: 1

    Why not start pushing a Sun Linux distro instead?

    There's no room for yet another distro - customers don't want it and ISVs don't want to certify against anything beyond Red Hat and Suse.

    When Sun launched their Intel based server, the LX50, it came with 'Sun Linux', which was basically Red Hat 7.3. The plan was to make it a bonafide distribution, supported, developed, etc.

    Customers weren't interested. They either had a distro they were used to and preferred, or they had apps that needed to run on a certain distro for them to be supported - think Oracle. There was simply no demand for it.

    The desktop is different - there's a great market out there for a polished, supported business desktop based on Linux. Sun's Java Desktop System is aimed at that market.

  15. Re:This is GREAT news! on Sun Rays For Linux · · Score: 1

    Just out of interest, why didn't you consider using a low cost box like a V240 or V440? A quad V440 can be less than 20K.

    I agree though that it will be nice to see Sun Ray available for Linux. It'll make the entry costs lower, particularly if all you're using the Sun Ray server for is to manage the Sun Ray network and displays, with all apps being run on Windows app servers, a fairly typical deployment for most businesses.

    For users who are happy with a Solaris/Linux desktop it's also good news. You can make Solaris look nice with a lot of fiddling, but a Linux desktop will just look nice 'out of the box', which is a great deal easier to support.

  16. Re:Wild speculation on Database Glitch Grounds American/US Airways · · Score: 1

    Which is why you deploy an infrastructure which can roll back errors that have been made.

  17. Re:Tired of the Mcnealy-kicking... on Lockheed Replaces 10,000 Solaris Seats with Linux · · Score: 1

    I agree. And if some x86 workstations are needed, the new AMD boxes are out. They look excellent.

  18. ...and Sun's new filesystem? on The Linux Filesystem Challenge · · Score: 1

    It's not just Apple and Sun that are doing cool file system stuff.

    http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1604449,00. as p

  19. Re:What would this be used for? on SGI & NASA Plan 10240-Processor Altix Cluster · · Score: 2, Funny

    Calculating things very quickly maybe? Just a thought. 500TB? I've never seen the need for more than 640k.

  20. Re:Her work was partially subsidized by the gov't on Examining Some Open Source Myths · · Score: 1

    Or perhaps the Scottish Arts Council could expect a return on their investment?

  21. Re:A fair treatment, but I still disagree on Examining Some Open Source Myths · · Score: 1

    None of those companies makes money selling CDs with Linux on them. They make money out of selling the support for it and/or hardware for it to run on, as well as commercial applications that run on top of it. If measured on a pure profit and loss basis, for example, the divisions responsible for managing free downloads would have been canned long ago.

    When you buy a Sun box, for example, there's no licence charge for Solaris per se - it's the surrounding products that generate revenue.

  22. Re:A fair treatment, but I still disagree on Examining Some Open Source Myths · · Score: 1

    But web developers' code of value is mostly in the backend and therefore not accessible. Sure, anyone can rip off someone's look and feel, but noone can simply cut and paste a few pages off Amazon and create their own sophisticated web based store.

  23. Re:A fair treatment, but I still disagree on Examining Some Open Source Myths · · Score: 1

    "So, for software, it simply wouldn't make sense for a company to create a package and sell it, at least, not in the ways they do now (note counterexample of Linux distros). Rather, people would solicite their need for service. They would see that the kernel needs better foobar support, and offer to pay for this. The software does not exist before it is paid for. There is no need to market a product, because there isn't any. There is only a service."

    Bear in mind that most customers will turn around and say 'I want a system that does whatever I want, instantly and costs me little or nothing'. Software companies know what business issues their customers face, so they create a product or solution that fulfils a business need making use of the technology available at any point in time.

    Certain niche examples aside, that means improving an existing product or creating a new one, which has to sell in reasonable volume to allow it to be supported and improved in future.

  24. Re:Linux? on NZX Moves To Oracle On Linux · · Score: 1

    99% of customers have a support contract, upgrades are included in that.

    You mean the OpenBSD developers who refused to sign an NDA which the Linux guys were happy to sign?

    Sparc is an open standard - http://www.sparc.org

  25. Re:Du-uh on SGI to Scale Linux Across 1024 CPUs · · Score: 1

    On a serious note, I can't think of any app other than Oracle that's of any use beyond the OSS stuff.

    I think it's funny how Sun is either far too expensive and we're being told to run everything on a few old 486s from the back of the office cupboard, or that Linux on a mainframe is the way to go.