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Sun Microsystems GUI Software

Java Desktop System Rivals XP, OSX in Usability 477

protohiro1 writes "In this glowing review Chris Gulker calls Sun's Java Desktop System 'the most polished and real-world user-ready Linux desktop in existence.' Well, I'm sold. Will this finally sell the PHBs on a linux corporate desktop?" Newsforge and Slashdot are both part of OSDN.
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Java Desktop System Rivals XP, OSX in Usability

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  • by tuba_dude ( 584287 ) <tuba.terry@gmail.com> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:34AM (#7010812) Homepage Journal
    Java, eh? Perfect! I don't have to spill coffee on my computer anymore, it's built-in now!
    • Sun, eh? (Score:3, Insightful)

      by sosume ( 680416 )
      So what's the advantage of switching from a Microsoft OS to one from Sun? Since it's not free I actually feel it's a rip-off and a major vendor lock-in. JVMs running everywhere on your machine. I'll pass, thank you very much!

      Sun is making profit over the open source community by selling free software bundled with their own.
      • Re:Sun, eh? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by trout_fish ( 470058 ) * <chris_lamb.bigfoot@com> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:18AM (#7010919) Homepage
        If you don't want companies to be able to make profit from your code then you should choose a more appropriate license. If you choose the GPL (or similar) then you choose to let companies profit from you code.
      • Re:Sun, eh? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Cederic ( 9623 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @05:28AM (#7011024) Journal

        >> Since it's not free I actually feel it's a rip-off and a major vendor lock-in. JVMs running everywhere on your machine.

        Hmm. Those two statements don't match.

        It's vendor lock-in because it's $50/year licencing. Migrating away is a matter of installing Linux, Gnome and Java and running the same applications on those.

        What you'll lose are the Sun additions that make it so cheap to maintain, sort out usability, etc. But that's why they're charging for it.

        JVMs running everywhere is such a non-issue I'm confused by you raising it. You are aware that there are multiple sources of JVMs, and they all work identically?

        ~Cederic
  • Article Summary (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Phroggy ( 441 ) * <slashdot3NO@SPAMphroggy.com> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:35AM (#7010816) Homepage
    So, it rivals OSX in usability because Nautilus has a toolbar button that opens a Documents folder, it can browse SMB and NFS shares, Evolution showed an hourglass cursor while launching, and - are you ready for this? - cut, copy and paste work.

    Yep, I'm sold.
    • Re:Article Summary (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Bugmaster ( 227959 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @06:44AM (#7011148) Homepage
      You may find it funny, but broken copy/paste is actually the reason I don't use Linux on the desktop. Oh, I'm sorry, what, it's not broken ? It's just giving me a choice of which copy/paste method to use ? Sorry, that's not good enough.

      On Windows, I can copy/paste pretty much anything from any program to any other reasonable program -- images, files, text, URLs, whatever. In Linux, I have to use a different button for each program, and half the time it doesn't work at all. If you think that's a trivial complaint, then you probably aren't using a desktop at all -- you must be doing all your work in vi or something.

      • Re:Article Summary (Score:4, Interesting)

        by tomstdenis ( 446163 ) <tomstdenis&gmail,com> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @07:36AM (#7011298) Homepage
        Um in virtually every app you just highlight text and click the middle [or both for 2 button] button. As for images... well it may be a pain [e.g. download the image and import] but if you're copying alot of images off the web you're a thief anyways so who cares :-)

        Tom
        • Re:Article Summary (Score:4, Interesting)

          by stefanlasiewski ( 63134 ) * <slashdot AT stefanco DOT com> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @10:51AM (#7012041) Homepage Journal
          Um in virtually every app you just highlight text and click the middle [or both for 2 button] button.

          I hate this method. If I accidently highlight any other text in any other application, I loose the items in the cut-n-paste buffer.

          And then there is the case where I can hit the middle mouse button to paste some text, but if I hit CTRL-V , I get some competely different text.

          I prefer the Windows method. It provides more control over what is in the buffer, and it's harder to blow it away by accident.
          • Um in virtually every app you just highlight text and click the middle [or both for 2 button] button.

            I hate this method. If I accidently highlight any other text in any other application, I loose the items in the cut-n-paste buffer.

            I agree that it can cause problems. Namely, when I cut something to the clipboard it is sometimes very important that it not be lost before being pasted somewhere else. Say I'm cutting code from one editor to another. I could make a backup, but then my productivity goes d
      • Re:Article Summary (Score:5, Insightful)

        by EvilNight ( 11001 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @09:23AM (#7011638)
        He's definitely right about this one. That sort of copy-paste and drag-drop power is taken for granted in Windows, and it's one of the things a Windows user is going to notice is missing instantly when using linux.

        Linux desktop simply isn't ready to tackle Microsoft yet. It's too kludgy and doesn't have enough program interoperability. When it does, I'll switch with a big ole smile on my face. I just hope linux gets a good desktop before I am forced to switch to a Mac to get away from Microsoft.
        • KDE? (Score:3, Insightful)

          I'm sorry, but I use that kind of copy-n-paste, drag-n-drop "innovations" every day in KDE. This is one of the *main* reasons I use KDE on my desktop, because the KDE apps work together so well.

          Granted, it does not work so well from a KDE app to, say, some independant GTK app, and vice-versa. KDE does *not* feel kludgy to me, and I've used just about every damn Desktop/Window Manager that you can possible get and compile for Linux, as well as SGI's 4DWM on the old Irix machine that sits on my desk.

          All i
        • Re:Article Summary (Score:3, Insightful)

          by RevAaron ( 125240 )
          Drag-n-drop power is also something I miss when using Windows. I don't consider myself loyal to any platform, I'll use what works. On a PC, your drag-n-drop abilities are pretty severely limited to a handful of operations, and apps typically have to support it specifically. On Mac OS, a lot of areas support DnD without the developer having to write code for it especially. For instance, on the Mac, I can select some text- in an edit field, Word doc, or just on a webpage and drag it to my desktop. Or dra
      • by spitzak ( 4019 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @11:48AM (#7012316) Homepage
        1. The "X clipboard" that most people are talking about is NOT the "clipboard" from Windows. It is DRAG & DROP!!!! With the huge advantage that you can move windows around, raise and lower them, and close them, before you drop. Basically selecting something is the start of a drag, and clicking the middle mouse button is a drop. It is EXACTLY the same (the normal complaint that you can't select the text to replace? Try doing the same action in Windows using drag & drop) Therefore X invented drag & drop first, something Microsofties are loath to admit.

        X's problem is that they failed to provide any kind of clipboard, thinking this drag & drop was sufficient. This led a lot of idiots to thinking the drag & drop WAS the clipboard, and stupid things like adding cut & copy actions modify the currently dragged item. When people started doing this correctly (all Gnome and KDE and most other toolkit based programs do) by putting the clipboard into a different buffer, people then complained about that (look at one of the other letters who said exactly this, apparently that person is too stupid to realize that if Ctrl+X modified the selected text, then selecting text would also modify the Ctrl+X text and thus completely defeat the purpose of the clipboard).

        Microsoft is 100% to blame for the fact that some programs use Alt and some use Ctrl for the shortcuts. When the GUI programs were being developed, they copied the Mac. Now LOOK at a Mac, and check where the Command key is. Nobody in their right mind would use any key other than Alt to emulate that. But Microsoft is not in their right mind. Almost all MSDOS programs and most early Windows programs were "inconsistent" too and used Alt instead of the Microsoft standard of Ctrl.

        If you discount old character-terminal programs like Emacs and VI (which both incidentally run on Windows and are just as "inconsistent" there) then I have never seen an X program that uses anything other than Ctrl+XCV or Alt+XCV for cut & copy & paste. There are however a lot of programs that mess with the drag & drop buffer instead of the clipboard for these actions, so I guess there are 4 arrangments.

        As for data other than Text, well here Microsoft is doing a lot better. Interestingly enough, both X and Windows have almost identical mechanisms for sending data other than text (lists of atoms identifying what types are available, and the dropped-on program chooses the type to get, and the called program converts to that type). Where Microsoft was smart and X was idiots is that Microsoft ASSIGNED some symbols, such as one for a BMP image. Stupid X consortium thought these assignments would be worked out by users and so now all X has is about a dozen ways to identify text and nothing else. Fortunatly it looks like the whole idea is going to be scrapped on both systems, to a system by which the dragged data is either plain text, or a URL identifying where the data is stored. This has the huge advantage that programs can reuse code that reads/writes files to interpret the dropped data, and programs that cannot understand the URL can easily run other programs that do. Because of this massive change it may be possible for X to catch up.

  • i'm interested... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by mOoZik ( 698544 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:35AM (#7010817) Homepage
    ...but having a website with broken links (particularly of the screenshot) isn't the best way to garner support, especially for a product with fierce competition.
  • Funny how the article on Slashdot has an ad for Microsoft and when reading the linked article, I get an ad for an MS product too.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:41AM (#7010830)
    Um... that's kind of like saying blows the doors off a 386-SX25.
  • by tsa ( 15680 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:42AM (#7010836) Homepage
    Unlike MS systems, this will be REALLY configurable, so that more computer-savvy users can change the window manager and the behaviour of the windows, etc... This system may set the standard for many KDE/Gnome versions and distro's to come.
  • The Price (Score:5, Insightful)

    by zwoelfk ( 586211 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:52AM (#7010856) Journal
    From the article: The price, $50 per seat per year, including updates and support is attractive, especially if Sun's $100/seat Java Enterprise System lives up to its goal of allowing 2000+ users to be administered by a single IT worker.

    I was interested in checking it out, but at $50/seat/year it's a little to much for me to suggest setting up on all the machines. I don't mind paying -- but I have Windows machines that I haven't paid anything for in years. I don't have to pay unless I want to upgrade those boxes. This looks like a solution that's trying to be as much like Windows as possible, but with a TCO that's higher.

    I'd be OK with $100 flat fee. Then if I want support (past 30 days or whatever), I can pay extra.
    That said I might want to get one seat just to check it out, but there's no way it's going to replace my current Linux or Windows desktops at that price.

    Z.
    • Re:The Price (Score:4, Insightful)

      by zwoelfk ( 586211 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:58AM (#7010872) Journal
      (Responding to my own post...)
      Also, since Sun's page doesn't make it clear, I assume that the desktop can't be redirected to another machine without a new seat license. Right now I have dumb terminals that use KDE that is running on a server and redirected over ssh. How will this kind of setup be integrated into this desktop (and still checking licenses?) -- and how easy will it be to transfer licenses around? For example, can I have 4 "floating" licenses that are used as thin laptops connect to the servers for a desktop? I don't have anywhere near enough information to decide on this regardless of how "good" it is.
    • Re:The Price (Score:4, Insightful)

      by afidel ( 530433 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:42AM (#7010946)
      Actually IF they can pull that off it would be DAMN cheap. Typical ratio in IT is one desktop person per 100-250 end users, if they can scale that back to 1/8th as many for an already well run organization then this thing would pay for itself many times over. For instance a typical desktop support professional probably makes between 35-55K/year plus benifits depending on the local market, so removing 7 professionals for those 2,000 users costs $100K but saves around $350K in personell. I really doubt anything can get support needs that low though, people are just dumb/ignorant and will need hand holding.
      • Re:The Price (Score:5, Interesting)

        by runenfool ( 503 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @05:04AM (#7010984)
        Actually, at the risk of sounding like a zealot I've heard of organizations with ratios of 1 IT guy supporting a couple thousand machines without difficulty. Crazy? Nope - Mac OS X (and OS 9 before it even). I didn't believe it myself (and Im a Mac user), but people with large Mac installations (all three of them) seem to get by pretty well without a lot of support costs.

        My memory is a bit hazy, but I think I talked to a few folks in K12 who made those types of claims (I was trying to do an informal TCO study of large Mac installations since you can't find a good recent one from something like Gartner), as well as a guy from Los Alamos IIRC. Perhaps we just got used to the support intensive Windows model.

        OK, Im being a little vague, but its 3am and my buzz is wearing off :)
    • Re:The Price (Score:4, Informative)

      by KoolDude ( 614134 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @05:37AM (#7011038)

      I was interested in checking it out, but at $50/seat/year it's a little to much for me to suggest setting up on all the machines

      Actually, the $50/employee/year pricing is only if you have the Java Enterprise System also. Otherwise, it is $100/Desktop/Year. If you take a look at the Sun Network Computing 03-Q3 web cast, Jonathan Schwartz justified their pricing mainly on following points:

      1. A company looking for a Microsoft upgrade will find it has to pay $179 for Windows XP and $279 for Office. So, they are primarily targetting companies that are looking for an upgrade.[I am not too sure about the prices, but Sun's offering is way cheaper).

      2. The cost also includes the cost for migration and support. They will assist and even indemnify against SCO-like lawsuits.

      3. A phone system for an employee costs $300 to buy + $300 per year for maintenance. Sun demonstrated software that uses VoIP and existing networks to integrate the telephone with this desktop. Lucent is providing the technology for this.

      4. Even the $100 is chosen so that CIOs can calculate the amount spent on IT in their head. 1000 desktops, the spending is $100,000. That's it.

      If anyone's interested, the presentation [sun.com] also shows Looking Glass 3D desktop and compatibility demonstrations using Office documents from Microsoft's website.

  • Desktop or distro ? (Score:5, Informative)

    by MoonFog ( 586818 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:56AM (#7010867)
    In this glowing review Chris Gulker calls Sun's Java Desktop System 'the most polished and real-world user-ready Linux desktop in existence.

    From this [osnews.com] article :
    The "proper" name of Sun Linux is "Java Desktop System" (which can be confusing as Sun is branding everything as "%java%" lately, exactly the same way Microsoft did with their ".NET"). The development/high-end version of Java Desktop System (JDS) is called "Java Enterprise System". The distribution is based on SuSE 8.2 and not on Red Hat Linux as it was originally said about a year ago.
    According to that article Java Desktop System is a Linux distribution, not just a desktop.
  • What is it anyway? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Mjlner ( 609829 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:57AM (#7010868) Journal
    From the FAQ:
    The Java Desktop System is shipped with Java 2 Platform, Standard Edition, 1.4.2 (with support for GNOME Look & Feel). The Java runtime is built into the desktop and into the Mozilla browser.

    I get the strong feeling that this is nothing more than a customized Gnome-distro with support for Java binaries. Especially since there is no information on what it really is...

    That raises the question "So what?". Why should I be interested?

    • by MoonFog ( 586818 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:06AM (#7010894)
      I don't know what a "gnome-distro" is, but accodring to this [osnews.com] article :

      The distribution is based on SuSE 8.2 and not on Red Hat Linux as it was originally said about a year ago. Yast2 and other SuSE/administrative utilities are only accessible via the command line and not from the graphical menu system. The desktop is based on Gnome 2.2, though Sun's engineers have tweaked it quite a bit.
      • by Kynde ( 324134 )
        So, if it's gnome based and all that, then how can it be 50$/seat? I mean, mustn't the sw be downloadable from the net, regardless of how much the "Sun's engineers have tweaked it quite a bit"
  • Come on, guys ... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Chromodromic ( 668389 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @03:58AM (#7010875)
    One improvement is the Documents folder on the desktop.

    Wow. Java's really opening up the world to the power of Linux usability. And to think, how many years went by without the Documents folder on the desktop?

    That's why successive Windows interfaces have been progressively dumbed-down from the perspective of a highly-computer-literate user. Marketing types refer to this as greater ease of use.

    Okay. Usability design types, however, refer to it as "progressive dumbing down".

    The Nautilus file browser, while initially set to a large icon view, allowed a side pane and file tree display not unlike Windows Explorer, and it uncomplainingly offered a view of everything in the file system, another feature that presumably would not be welcomed in an enterprise production desktop.

    Uncomplainingly? Yeah, okay, it's a word, technically, but it sucks as a word. If the writologist proofreadicated his articlation, he might findify prosage less awkwarditious.

    Nevertheless, it's a relief that the usability of Windows Explorer is retained in the Java Desktop.

    Also, is Java really open sourced? Is StarOffice? OpenOffice is, but StarOffice, well ...

    Whatever. The article reads like marketing spooge, and it's based on a demo off a CD. Did this really make Slashdot's home page?

    Crap. And to think my post about stripper techno-implants got rejected ...

  • the 'real world' (Score:3, Insightful)

    by timelady ( 566419 ) <`timelady' `at' `gmail.com'> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:02AM (#7010884) Homepage

    You know what? I LIVE in the real world. I DONT like the standard that windows sets. I LIKE being able to customise my fvwm desktop to suit myself.

    What this does is just allow the trained masses to migrate easily. Great. A start, probably. But a leap forward for Linux? Sorry, just dont see it that way. Why do people get excited when another windows clone comes out, and we are supposed to act like its the Holy Grail for Linux?

    Having said that, I understand the business rationale of not wanting to retrain its end users, its a productivity issue. But I dont see how I am suddenly in the UNREAL world because i use, and train users, in Linux. I find windows, and its lack of customisation, closed source, and limited administration, to be a bit surreal, personally!

    • by Cederic ( 9623 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @05:41AM (#7011046) Journal

      Try supporting a multi-thousand desktop environment. You really really DON'T want users customising and modifying their desktop environment.
      - standard roll-outs of apps no longer work or take considerably longer development effort
      - training becomes more of a pain
      - people spend all day changing their settings instead of being productive
      - people change things so they no longer work, then ring up and complain that things no longer work (cost for helpdesk, for people to go out and fix it, etc)

      The lack of customisation is a big bonus in an enterprise corporate environment.

      For the record, I always customise my desktop, its appearance, and do naughty things like installing my own web browser instead of using the corporate standard. Which is why I always argue that development boxes (which I use) shouldn't have the same constraints that standard users boxes have. Double-standards, etc :)

      ~Cederic
  • by Mjlner ( 609829 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:03AM (#7010885) Journal
    Where in the "article" is usability mentioned? Or ease of use? Or user friendliness?

    Where in the "article" does it say that the "Desktop" delivers anything more than support for Java?

  • by Talez ( 468021 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:06AM (#7010895)
    That's great. It has pretty icons and widgets.

    Now could I please have a rundown on all the backend stuff?

    This includes but is not limited to:

    What tools do Sun intend to provide me with so that I can create a Standard Operating Environment.

    How effective are these tools in large scale configurations?

    How well can application rollouts be managed on >100 machines?

    "SUN HAS PRETTY WIDGETS!" doesn't give me any useful information whatsoever.
  • Java? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by WebfishUK ( 249858 )
    I see no mention of Java being used in the core of this system, it's all built on Gnome & GTK isn't it? I heard that Sun have started to recognise the marketing potential in Java and said they will be exploiting it to greater extent in the future. Is that what is happening here?
  • Not again... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by cenobita ( 615440 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:12AM (#7010904)
    Can we say *yawn*?

    Ximian pops up looking like Outlook. The overall layout looks like Windows. Ad nauseum. Once again, someone is scraping together a Linux distro, trying to make it look like Windows, and giving us absolutely jack in terms of innovation, *better* usability, or creativity. Trying to accomodate Windows users by giving them a similar interface, but branding it Linux, is just plain foolish.

    Make a product that's better than Windows on *all* counts, is bundled with custom-written applications instead of tweaked versions of existing ones, and then i'll raise an eyebrow.

    I don't think Windows is the greatest thing since sliced bread, but let's acknowledge the faults of the alternatives. There are dozens upon dozens of Linux distributions, and so far, i've seen virtually *nothing* worth noting from an interface perspective. We brand everything as being intended for this and that audience, this and that purpose, whatever emphasis..but with the exception of some underlying framework, isn't this just a essentially a rehash of what dozens have done before?

    I'm sure this will get more than few people stepping up to proclaim the vast differences between their distro of choice, but please save it. "Debian uses apt!", "Gentoo uses portage and is intended for..!" meh. They're both Linux, they both lend the capacity to do whatever the hell you want, and they can both be made to run the exact same applications...which, really, is what the average end user cares about, above all.

    The average user is going to take one look at this stuff and go, "Ok, so if it looks like Windows, but doesn't run all the apps I need, why bother?"
    • Re:Not again... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Pedrito ( 94783 )

      Once again, someone is scraping together a Linux distro, trying to make it look like Windows, and giving us absolutely jack in terms of innovation, *better* usability, or creativity.

      Actually, that's precisely what Linux needs. If it doesn't look like and work like what people are used to, they're not going to use it. I agree some innovation would be nice, but I'd settle for something that works like Windows for the most part.

      The Linux community has tried time and again to do new, fresh, creative thin

  • Explain (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Bloodmoon1 ( 604793 )
    How XP can even be mentioned in a way that suggets it's even in the same usability tier as OS X? People who use OS X, love OS X. People who use XP, absolutly hate XP. Not to mention XP has that wonderus task based system where it takes, by my count last time I used a PC, 5 steps to even be able to see your files. It takes 1 on OS X, and I don't have to dig through system control panels to do it. Look, maybe this is a bit flamey, but more than anything it's true. OS X is, by far, the easiest, most powerful O
    • How XP can even be mentioned in a way that suggets it's even in the same usability tier as OS X?

      Because it is ?

      People who use OS X, love OS X. People who use XP, absolutly hate XP.

      I use both. I "love" neither. They're tools. There are some things that one does better than the other and vice versa.

      Not to mention XP has that wonderus task based system where it takes, by my count last time I used a PC, 5 steps to even be able to see your files.

      XP: Double click "My Documents" on the Desktop.

      OS X: Cli

      • How do you actually use them though? I use my mac often for work, entertainment, etc. and love it. They really are great machines. I'm well aware it is a tool to get things done, but it feels more than such. Every person I've personally talked to, hates Windows XP for various reasons. Only complaints I've ever heard about Apple's are if they're to old. Apple has zealots for a reason. You don't see many Windows zealots...

        XP: Double click "My Documents" on the Desktop.

        OS X: Click Finder icon in Dock, clic
  • by ultrabot ( 200914 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:17AM (#7010915)
    From an article [eweek.com]:

    Also, let me really clear about our Linux strategy. We don't have one. We don't at all. We do not believe that Linux plays a role on the server. Period. If you want to buy it, we will sell it to you, but we believe that Solaris is a better alternative, that is safer, more robust, higher quality and dramatically less expensive in purchase price.

    Obviously Sun is not "committed", but all in all, this bodes well for Linux: more desktop apps will be tested and developed specifically on Linux.

    However, you can expect Sun to push the Linux solution for a while, utilizing the momentun Linux has (and Solaris doesn't), and as sudden "problems" with Linux appears, the don't really have motivation to fix the problems; rather, they suggest that the customers of their "Java Desktop" switch to Solaris-x86.

    Also from the article, regarding the perception that Sun is being unethical in supporting SCO:

    I can't do anything about the perception that's out there and to be blunt, I don't care as those people aren't going to drive our future--customers are.

    So we don't matter, eh? The Open Source community are not your "customers"? Schwarz misses part of the point, in that techies are their customers, and quite a lot of techies are very Linux-sympathetic these days. Arrogance doesn't help anyone, either.

    I dunno, but Schwarz comes out as quite an asshole in that article, and I can't really tell whether I wish Sun a great success with Mad Hatter. It is good for Linux and Open Standards and all, but Sun has the wrong attitude about the whole thing. They would do well to play a "nice guy" for a while (like they do/did with Open Office), it might occasionally pay off.
  • by imag0 ( 605684 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:21AM (#7010922) Homepage
    Here's a *real* java desktop, free. Looks cool

    http://www.jdistro.com/
  • by master_p ( 608214 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:31AM (#7010936)
    "My documents" ? "Network places" ? "My Computer" ? the taskbar ? the start button ? Either Microsoft got it right and we should all admit it or we should stop copying Microsoft because it sucks (what a dichotomy for Microsoft haters, such as Sun!!! from one side they are against Microsoft, from the other they copy Microsoft!!!)

    By the way, Java is free. Why the Java Desktop is not free ? this is Linux, for Christ's sake.
    • by ctid ( 449118 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:58AM (#7010973) Homepage
      (what a dichotomy for Microsoft haters, such as Sun!!! from one side they are against Microsoft, from the other they copy Microsoft!!!)

      Perhaps it is other things about Microsoft that suck. For example: security, secret file formats, bloated and buggy applications etc.

      By the way, Java is free. Why the Java Desktop is not free ? this is Linux, for Christ's sake.

      Notwithstanding the non sequitur, Linux is free-as-in-speech, not free-as-in-beer. However, you can get Linux for free-as-in-beer if you just search for it on the web. It's perfectly simple to search for free linux downloads with google [google.com].

  • Sun, Sco ... (Score:4, Informative)

    by sbranden ( 471243 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @04:32AM (#7010937)
    I came to this article after reading what Sun think of Linux in this [eweek.com] story. Really puts this marketing bullshit into perspective for me.
  • Forget that review! What's the point in having a Desktop "your Mom and Pop will understand" when you're actually targeting the corporate market ("1000 Desktops administrated by a single IT worker")?

    Sun is still hawking their "thin clients" model, just replacing proprietary hardware that no-one bought with commodity hardware that everyone is supposed to have (and a certain OS for i386 machines that (only?) Sun is entitled to use without fear of lawsuits, sez SCO...)

    So, What's the real deal? Sun wants to

  • I can't help but think this will need seriously large amounts of RAM/CPU to get it running well. Can't find anything on the sun site though

    Rus
  • by skinfitz ( 564041 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @05:08AM (#7010989) Journal
    From the site:
    Pricing
    Q. How much does Java Desktop System sell for?
    A.There are two available pricing options for Java Desktop System:

    $100 / desktop / year. An OEM volume tier pricing schedule is also available.
    $50 / employee / year for Sun Java Enterprise System customers.


    So.. explain why anyone should spend silly amounts of money replacing the existing Windows and OSX machines just to have the honour of renting an OS which does almost exactly the same thing from Sun?
  • by gellenburg ( 61212 ) <george@ellenburg.org> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @05:27AM (#7011023) Homepage Journal
    Any desktop which requires the user to use more than one mouse button obviously can't be all that great. ;-)

  • what's new? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by MikeFM ( 12491 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @05:28AM (#7011027) Homepage Journal
    I don't really see anything new to this desktop. It's just Gnome cleaned up (the way many of us admins already have it for our users) with the ability to launch Java programs (which we can do anyway last timeI checked)? I didn't really see anything else described. I have no problem with Sun selling this (except for the stupid name).. it'll be good that someone finally figured out not to default with a stupid number of menu options and so forth.. but is there anything really news worthy? It sounds okay for normal users but I'm glad I don't have to use it. :)
  • by brundlefly ( 189430 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @07:18AM (#7011247)

    For something as complex as a desktop OS, it's virtually impossible to have "usability" without usage, and to-date this OS has no users to speak of.

    Show me even a meager 500,000 users who consider the usability of this to be on par with WinXP or MacOSX and then you'll have a story. Otherwise this is just PRWire disguised as a lab study.

  • by reallocate ( 142797 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @07:28AM (#7011272)
    It's very good to see Sun launch a a Linux distribution that won't make repel adults in horror, but Gulker perpetuates at least one of the abiding and unfortunate errors of many Linux supporters.

    Contrary to the linkage made by the review, ease of use is not synonymous with "dumbing down". Ease of use does not mean hiding capabilities. It simply means what it says: easy to use.

    Example: Creating a "Documents" directory and suggesting users sore all their documents there makes a system easier to use. Nothing frces a user to do that; no capability is lost. If a user wants to track through the file system and store files in other locations, nothing prevents that. A "Documents" directory is based on the same principle as the "etc" and "home" directories. Both provide a suggested place to store files that share certain characteristics. If using a "Documents" directory is for dummies, why don't we see smart admins storing configuration files all over the file system? Surely, anyone smart enough to use Unix doesn't need help finding files?

    Other examples exist, but the perpetuation of the bogus ease of use/dumbing down linkage remains an ugly theme of the Linux community.
  • Why Java? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by xynopsis ( 224788 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @07:41AM (#7011317)
    IMO, Java on the desktop is not very good. I see no reason why someone should code apps in java, with the exception perhaps of the great web app, when the the free Qt toolkit and the much more mature and robust C++ exists.

    Multi-platform support (*nix, windows, embedded,mac), native GUI, networking, threads, you name it QT almost has it all. In fact I don't see any advantage in using these semi-interpreted languages (including m$ C#) to the native C++/QT combo. Garbage collection? I find creating objects with QObject parents so convenient! No more leaks. Write once run anywhere? QT does that with a simple recompile from a single source. Please enlighten me if I have missed something. But right now you have to pry C++ from my cold dead hands to make me switch over. C++ plus QT is C++ on steroids.

    Disclaimer I don't work for Trolltech. I just happen to find QT so damn nice!
  • by DrWhizBang ( 5333 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @07:54AM (#7011349) Homepage Journal
    And in other news, the Ford Focus now rivals the Chev Cavalier for speed.

    Next reporter, please...
  • by dilute ( 74234 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @08:16AM (#7011405)
    And this addresses NEITHER ONE OF THEM.

    It's not open enough for techies and it's too wierd for the rest of the market.

    This seems pretty pointless. Who financed it?

  • by KRzBZ ( 707148 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @08:23AM (#7011417)
    I find it odd that few of the tech press have picked up on it, and even fewer people have taken notice of the consistently good reviews it gets for this type of application, but Xandros Linux has *already done* what Sun is trying to do, and they have had their product out for 10 months now.

    If you are a intermediate/advanced Linux user, Xandros probably won't interest you for personal use, but as a way to get win refugees started, it beats every other distro hands down (including the perennial favorite "newbie" distro, 'Drake). The sole purpose of the distro is to make win refugees be able to get using Linux with the least amount of pain and adaptation possible.

    Xandros V.1 is Debian Woody based, uses older software libs, desktop uses KDE2.2, has *excellent* networking abilities with win shares and other b0xen (using the proprietary Xandros File Manager (XFM)), and has a simplified "Start" menu with 1 "best of breed" app for each task a user may need to perform. Hardware recognition on install is great, it picked up my hotplugged Archos MP3 player, Canon camera, USB mouse, etc etc with no problems post-install. It is intended for the "enterprise desktop", with stability being a prime requisite for any software which comes with the distro. Xandros V.2 (based on much newer software) is in beta testing right now. Individual prices - The "Deluxe" version (US$99) comes bundled with CrossOver Office and PlugIns, so that no msOffice or browser functionality is lost in the switch to Linux. The "Standard" version, without the costly CrossOver software, is US$40.

    So, if you can't or don't want to wait for the Java desktop to be ready, try the Linux desktop that is already doing what Sun is hoping to do.

    I don't work for Xandros, I do want to see them succeed - they understand what is needed to help migrate people to Linux.

    It looks like Sun knows that too, they're just late to the game, IMO.
  • by LINM ( 255706 ) <mbego00@gsb.col u m b i a . edu> on Saturday September 20, 2003 @08:51AM (#7011515) Homepage
    I went through the article and pulled out the various criteria that the desktop was under and list them below:

    Pleasant looking at launch
    Documents folder in the user's home directory
    Opened with a view of all data repositories
    Theme pervasive
    Star Office 7

    Unfortunately, the review was based largely on cosmetic appearances. Though important, they will certainly not cut it for an enterprise roll-out.

    The one functionality related comment is on Star Office 7. Though the OOo team has done some great work, and I think it is a fantastic suite for home users, I do not believe that Star Office (or OOo) are ready to repalace MS Office in the work place any time soon. Why? Just a few reasons: file compatibility, macros, driver support, presentation tool, etc. etc.

    Furthermore, there are several key feature sets that the article ignores that are critical for an enterprise desktop rollout:
    ---Networking - can this thing jump onto the company's windows network plug and play or do you have to go learn Samba3?
    ---Application Compatibility - the company will likely have legacy or windows apps they need to run. Does Sun desktop do anything for them?
    ---Mail server - I know they are using Gnome, but does Sun have any deal with Novell (current home of Ximian) to let it talk to Exchange?
    ---Installer - Did he try to install it? If you are going to have to put it on 2000 desktops at a company, I hope that works very very well.
    ---Distribution - What distribution is this residing on. This could make a huge difference in how well the thing works. Red Hat and dependancy hell? No thanks.

    I think if you take a look around, Xandros probably has by far the best desktop for corporate use. It solve all of the above issues and is tremendously easy to use. You could also check out Suse, though I think it will be lacking in a few areas.

    I want to see MS come down, but this brief write up doesn't have me convinced the Sun Desktop herlds in a new era...
  • it's Gnome (Score:5, Interesting)

    by penguin7of9 ( 697383 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @09:11AM (#7011601)
    Calling this thing a "Java desktop" is rather deceptive. Sun took the Gnome desktop, bundled it with a Java runtime and JavaCard authentication, made some cosmetic changes, and then just called it a "Java desktop". Pretty much all the applications, all the policy decisions, all the behavior, and all the functionality are Gnome's. If this is a "great desktop", then so must Gnome be.

    In seven years, Java desktop application use is virtually non-existent. Sun has already tried and failed to create and establish a Java-based desktop with Java applications. So, what do they do? They take a successful open source desktop written mostly in C and C++ and call it a "Java desktop". I think that speaks volumes about the suitability of Sun Java and Swing for writing desktop applications and about how desparate Sun is getting. I think it also shows a disrespect Sun has for open source, despite a veneer of support and opportunistic open source licensing of some of their products (mostly in an attempt to harm competitors or to prop up bad Sun standards).

    From a practical point of view, this won't matter. Basically, what this really says is that Sun is replacing CDE and OpenWindows with Gnome on their machines, and that they are shipping Java along with it (surprise). Sun had already announced that they were going to do that.

    What will be really interesting is whether Sun will start shipping Mono with that, since it looks increasingly likely that at least some Gnome applications will be written in Mono (just like some Gnome applications are written in Python, Perl, and C++).
  • by theolein ( 316044 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @09:18AM (#7011621) Journal
    I read about this a while ago and at first thought Sun had gone the whole hog and turned out something like jDistro i.e. a completely Java based desktop environment, but then discovered it was YALD (Yet Another Linux Distro) albeit a clean one, from the same company that bashes Linux one day because they're pissed that it's taking customers away from the hallowed Solaris, and pushing it like crazy the next in an attempt to actually market StarOffice and grab a piece of the Linux pie.

    The distro, because this is what it is, will certainly gather a few customers that want 24/7 desktop support and don't mind paying for it, but they're going to have an uphill battle against established players like RedHat and SuSE in the enterprise and Debian and Gentoo in the small space. There really isn't much room for YALD these days.

    Sun would almost assuredly have preferred to have done all this on Solaris, but no one is interested anymore, given Sun's haphazard moves in Solarisx86 and the increasing popularity of Linux in governments and large businesses.

    What is Sun's problem? Easy, they make excellent servers and a robust stable OS, but their pricing and their totally insane one day on next day off commitment to TotD (Trend of the Day) and comments by no less than McNealy and co. only serve to make potential customers even more wary. i.e. no clear long term goals!

    What could Sun have done instead of this YALD? They should have taken an intelligent risk a while ago and comitted to making Linux robust, fast and scalable on their own good quality hardware. This is the route that IBM has gone and it is paying off bigtime for IBM. They should have realised that proprietry *nixes in the server room are on the way out, due to costs alone (OS, propritry support and application porting costs)

    Instead Sun's McNealy likes to think like SCO's McBride one day (All your IP are belong to us) and like Steve Jobs the next (My desktop is better than yours)

    What he hasn't noticed is that Apple has taken a very consistent long term approach to establishing OSX and Apple hardware as popular amongst consumers and design pros first and slowly amongst enterprise CEOs, CIOs etc second (Hey, WTF, Oracle runs on that snappy XServe?) with the byproduct of being immensely popular amongst *nix Sysadmins (The number of Linux and Solaris Sysadmins running around with Powerbooks and iBooks is amazing).

    As for this YALD being more usable than WindowsXP, this must be a joke, right? Windows and Microsoft have a terrible security record and a bad image as wife and market abusers, but they have a huge marketshare, almost all of the desktop applications and an acceptable and responsive Desktop UI. For all its problems Windows is here to stay for a long time (and copy-paste actually works)

    Sun should stick to what it does best, and avoid running off into uncharted waters every second day.
  • by ZoneGray ( 168419 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @09:27AM (#7011648) Homepage
    From the article:

    >> Java Desktop System could be dropped into most non-technical enterprises in places where general productivity was the mission,

    What he misses (like nearly all of the Linux On The Corporate Desktop advocates) is that nearly every small business uses some sort of vertical-market application as their central IS system. There are packages for real estate agents, beverage wholesalers, dental offices, auto repair shops, property management, and for practically every other business you can think of. And nearly all of them run on Windows.

    Every small business I've ever worked with uses something like this, and that's always the obstacle to having such companies even consider Linux.

    Perhaps as more of these are moved to an HTTP-based architecture, the doors will open for Linux on the business desktop, but until then, the real lock-in isn't MS Office but the zillions of vertical-market apps that run on Windows.
  • by flacco ( 324089 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @11:30AM (#7012219)
    java would have a lot more friends on the desktop if it had a shareable JVM so you didn't have to lug in another multi-megabyte VM every time you started the smallest utility.

    Maybe this is what Sun is positioning this desktop for: future versions fo the JVM might have this ability.

    while we're at it, a lightweight servlet engine for lightweight desktop web applications would be quite nice too.

  • Where to begin... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by b-baggins ( 610215 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @12:11PM (#7012444) Journal
    Typical Linux Geek thinking ease-of-use = dumbing down and that a good interface means pretty icons.

    Ease of use means making the computer work the way PEOPLE think, not forcing people to work the way COMPUTERS think.

    Linux geeks and other developers, who have been conditioned to think like the computer because of the work they do, have the mistaken notion that advanced computer user means a user who has learned to force the natural human way of doing things into the artificial machine way a computer does things.

    Any interface that doesn't force this paradigm is "dumbed down."

    The truth is, the Linux geek has simply been conditioned to do things the difficult way, not the natural way. Designing the interface to do things the natural way is not dumbing it down, it's making the Linux Geek's paradigm obsolete. Of course, the Linux Geek doesn't like this, so in a fit of human ego, he looks his nose down on anything that points out the stupidity of his position (working the way the computer demands; being the tool of the computer), and calls it "dumbing down."

    The Sun Java Desktop follows this same, stupid convention.

    The start menu is in the wrong place. In cultures that read left to right, top to bottom, the most important area of focus is always the upper left corner, followed by the upper right corner, then the lower right corner. The area of least importance, that takes the most conscious effort to locate, and feels the most unnatural, is the lower left corner. So guess where Sun, Windows, and other Linux copycats put the most important UI widget in the whole interface?

    Next, the start menu is packed with long lists of applications in tons of different categories. To the Linux Geek, this is heaven, because it forces him to think like a computer. To a human, this is unnatural. The human mind works in small groups. The start menu should be sparse, with a few, general categories, containing a few applications. Lists should have no more than five items, with an option to dig deeper. You make the detail a conscious choice to the user, not throw it in his face. That's the Windows paradigm: Let's see how much crap we can throw on the screen because it proves our program is POWERFUL!!

    And, finally, the reviewer totally ignores the most important UI elements for ease-of-use, which shows he doesn't get it...still.

    Does the UI still use the web browser paradigm for file location? This is asinine. The web browser paradigm is based on pages of information. The folder/file structure of a hard drive is designed around a, well, folder, folder contents model. Using a page serving paradigm to locate items in a filing cabinet is stupid, and continuing to insist on it is asinine because it is unnatural, feels unnatural, and requires the user to expend too much effort to find what he wants.

    What about configuring items in the start menu? How easy is it to add things? Remove things? No mention of this.

    What about installing applications. Does the user have to deal with /usr/share, /usr/bin, and crap like that, or are applications put in a folder called Programs?

    What about account management? Can the GUI allow root commands for installing software the way OS X does, by authenticating in a dialog, or does the user have to think like a computer, and change his identity just to install a program?

    This review can basically be summed up as: This is a cool desktop because, hey, it's got a cool look, all the apps follow that look, there's a documents folder on the desktop for morons who don't know any better, and the start menu is so full of crap, it's unusable.

    Sorry, but Linux is STILL not ready for the desktop. Go back to OS X, study it again, find out that it's NOT Aqua and throbbing buttons that make it a great GUI, and try again.
  • by Cokelee ( 585232 ) on Saturday September 20, 2003 @01:00PM (#7012704)

    Fuck Sun [eweek.com].

    They suck.

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