I've had a lot of problems with Opera on Solaris, mostly in the page rendering. I considered it an alternative to Netscape, which I've always been loyal to but is pretty much an unstable memory leaking hog, but the fact that the pages don't look right pretty much voids off any sort of advantages it may have. I'll deal with Netscape's downsides until Opera can clean itself up more.
As I remember my high school days (which coincidentally weren't too long ago), there were not evn any system administrators for the basic networks. If they couldn't successfully manage a Windows network on the staff they had, imagine trying to keep a Linux/BSD network? It would just be a huge security hole. The only time UNIX was ever used in my old high school was when I found an old Sparc system and wrote a perl script to catalog music at our radio station, and even then they had their inhibitions. Schools used to be domainated by Apple, now it's Microsoft.
I've had a lot of problems with Opera on Solaris, mostly in the page rendering. I considered it an alternative to Netscape, which I've always been loyal to but is pretty much an unstable memory leaking hog, but the fact that the pages don't look right pretty much voids off any sort of advantages it may have. I'll deal with Netscape's downsides until Opera can clean itself up more.
As I remember my high school days (which coincidentally weren't too long ago), there were not evn any system administrators for the basic networks. If they couldn't successfully manage a Windows network on the staff they had, imagine trying to keep a Linux/BSD network? It would just be a huge security hole. The only time UNIX was ever used in my old high school was when I found an old Sparc system and wrote a perl script to catalog music at our radio station, and even then they had their inhibitions. Schools used to be domainated by Apple, now it's Microsoft.