Solaris 10 Installation and Desktop Walkthrough 370
linuxbeta writes "On OSDir they've got a whole whack of screenshots of Sun's Solaris 10 from the first boot screen, through an x86 installation, and through either a Java Desktop System 3 or CDE (Common Desktop Environment) 1.6 desktop. It's nice to have a look at Java Desktop System 3 while it's not even available for Linux (yet). I dunno... looks like Linux to me. I know about the licensing issues with Solaris 10, but I think they've got something going on here."
Glass (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Glass (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Glass (Score:5, Informative)
Take this with a pinch of salt (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Take this with a pinch of salt (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Take this with a pinch of salt (Score:3, Interesting)
When a hardware company makes a big deal about how many cpus they can support with SMP, you know the processers are slow.
About 1996 when IBM had trouble ramping up the speed of thier Power chips, all the sales bumf emphasised how good the SMP performance was.
Now the positions are reversed. Solaris has to scale to 128 processers to compete with the competitions 32 processor systems. With the next generation of Opteron chips Linux only needs to scale to 16 processors to compete with 128 processor Solaris/Sp
Re:Take this with a pinch of salt (Score:4, Informative)
Opteron is great. We all love Opteron. But Opteron only supports 8 CPUs per system (3 HT ports per chip) without some really serious hackery, and even if that limitation were removed, a 16-Opteron (I assume you mean 16 cores) system wouldn't be faster than a 144-core F25K. Sun sells Opteron machines alongside SPARC, so if you think SPARC is too slow and/or expensive, just choose another machine.
Scalability, whether horizontal or vertical, has to be a property of all the components of a system or it's not really present at all. If a 16-CPU XXX machine were as fast as a 144-core starcat (Hitachi might be able to say that, but I doubt it), why wouldn't manufacturer XXX want to make a machine with 72 or 128 or 144 of those CPUs, and be 5 or 6 times as fast as the starcat? They would, of course. And when they figure out hardware scalability, they'll need an OS that will scale up with them.
But really, what's any of this got to do with Solaris? It runs on Opteron machines too, whether made by Sun or not, and 32-bit x86 machines if you're stuck in the 90s. For that matter, Linux will run on SPARC machines. x86 boxes - even 64-bit ones - aren't the competition for the starcats, regardless of what OS they run. The lesson here is that scaling up allows you to take advantage of more CPUs in any kind of machine. Sooner or later it will become practically impossible to clock CPUs any higher, and if you'd examined your argument at all - and its basis on multicore Opterons - you'd realize that we're pretty much there now, which is why every CPU manufacturer, not just Sun, is looking at CMT and multicore as the paths to increased performance in the future. This is not a fringe technology - every vendor including Intel and AMD clearly thinks it's important. If that turns out to be true, OS scalability and workload parallelism will be the limiting performance factors for nearly all computers. Not CPU clock rate. Regardless of what you think of SPARC, considering your implicit admission that even Opteron clocks won't increase without bound, you ought to recognize that Solaris is probably in a good position to take advantage of an important ongoing cross-market trend in hardware design.
Re:Take this with a pinch of salt (Score:5, Insightful)
How so? Sun's revenue last year was over $10bn, and their move to open sourcing Solaris, some impressive new features in Solaris 10, and their work on the Java Desktop as well as Project Looking Glass all show they are not standing still.
Sun's move to open source can only help them on the desktop. Java Desktop is really slick for the corporate environment. Project Looking Glass could really pay off big for them if they are able to refine it properly (think about OS X's aqua interface. 3d has a lot of potential on the desktop).
And if Sun manages to move Solaris to 100% open source, expect it to be *huge* competition to Linux.
Re:Huge competition? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Huge competition? (Score:3, Funny)
Bingo.
"Linux is dying - Netcraft".
Sincerely
Bee S. Dee.
Re:Huge competition? (Score:4, Insightful)
Sure they do. They compete for both users and developers. This sort of competition seems far more noble than the nature of competition in the corporate world, but it's still competition nonetheless.
Almost as if you started to build a garage, your neighbor saw you and wanted to RACE, and finish one before you did. ooooh, WHO CARES.
Yeah, I guess the XFree86 folks don't care that everyone's moving to Xorg. Or the GNOME folks wouldn't care if everyone but them ran KDE. I also recall the Firefox team taking out an ad in the NYT asking people to try Firefox.
People who have used Linux want something that THEY have worked on, THEY have started. SUN is getting into this to compete with companies that USE Linux, the people developing it usually don't care.
What do you mean by, 'People who have used Linux...'? You clearly don't mean everyone who has used Linux, because that's obviously false. In fact, very few people who use Linux actually contribute to it.
Which, of course, has nothing to do with whether or not Solaris competes with Linux.
Besides the point, usually two open source projects will BENEFIT from each other. Gnome, X, Mozilla, Konqueror as in with Apple, etc.
I'm certain they will benefit from each other. That doesn't mean they don't also compete.
Re:Their stock is $4 per share... (Score:4, Informative)
And their stock is $4. Four. Not $40, like Apple (whose stock follows a similar trend, only theirs went up an octave..)
Here's the comparison between SUNW and AAPL:
SUNW v AAPL [yahoo.com]
Note that your description of Sun's chart is the same as for Apple's. You'll also note Sun's maket cap is over $15bn.
Sun is by no means on the brink of scrapping Solaris.
All you've done is shown that Apple is in better shape than Sun, which is something of an odd thing to do when comparing Solaris to Linux.
Re:Take this with a pinch of salt (Score:4, Insightful)
They've actually been working on OpenSolaris for five years, and this summer it will be a genuine OSS _UNIX_. Not a work-alike UNIX but the real deal with more than two decades worth of production system use. It hasn't scaled to 64+ CPUs just this year, but more than five years ago. It hasn't just gotten solid virtualization technology, it's had it for years. For example.
Re:Take this with a pinch of salt (Score:2)
Actually, the StarFire came out in 1997, so they've been 64-way for more than eight years, now.
Err...looks like Linux? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Err...looks like Linux? (Score:3, Informative)
You've never heard of Colonel Gnome?
Seriously, though, Java Desktop is just Sun's version of Gnome [osnews.com]. They must of done something serious with it to justify charging $50 for it. Not clear what though.
Oh yeah, and it is available for linux [sun.com].
Re:Err...looks like Linux? (Score:2)
You dont want or need support? no prob, just use your $LINUX_DISTRO_OF_CHOICE. That said, a lot of companies out there dont mind tossing $50 a year toward a desktop just so that they can call and yell at somebody when something goes wrong.
Personally, I'll stick with FC3 on my desktop and solaris (mostly sparc with a growing number of opteron based systems) in the datacenter.
Re:Err...looks like Linux? (Score:4, Informative)
f course if you want support.....
Re:Err...looks like Linux? (Score:4, Informative)
I'm typing this comment from my _free_ downloaded Solaris 10 with JDS3, right now. Great system, but just like other GNOME/KDE desktops, don't skimp on your RAM, though. Any computer better than say a 400MHz Pentium with 256MB should be okay (not super but okay).
Probably the best aspect of JDS3 is that everything is pretty well integrated, clearly laid out, and there are few problems with it. It really is as easy to use as Windows. It comes with Acroread, Mozilla, Evolution, and Staroffice, among other things, too. Add Moneydance for covering finances, and it really can replace Windows for a lot of people.
With these sorts of GNOME/KDE desktops maturing, Microsoft really needs to get their ship in order!
Re:Err...looks like Linux? (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh, BTW, don't forget to finish off the system with Blastwave [blastwave.org]. They provide a BSD-like package retriever that's integrated with Solaris' package system. Pretty slick.
Re:Err...looks like Linux? (Score:2)
Re:Err...looks like Linux? (Score:3, Insightful)
English is a set of languages with regional and cultural sets of rules. When English first came to be printed an east anglian variation was used not because it was the correct form but because it was the form spoken and written by the printer.
English is a living language, that is it evolves and mutates as it is being used. That mutations occur is nothing new, which is why older written records in E
Re:Err...looks like Linux? (Score:3, Funny)
Upon further scrutiny... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Upon further scrutiny... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Upon further scrutiny... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Upon further scrutiny... (Score:2)
What's the curve on that line? Curious. (I don't know for that version of Windows.)
Re:Err...looks like Linux? (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah, I thought that was an incredibly dumb comment, too, and I haven't RTFA.
Text Based Install (Score:3, Funny)
Screenshots of an OS install...what next? (Score:5, Funny)
Screenshots of the writer defragging his hard drive?
Re:Screenshots of an OS install...what next? (Score:2)
Re:Screenshots of an OS install...what next? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yeah.... (Score:3, Insightful)
It looks like it's running through vmware (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It looks like it's running through vmware (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It looks like it's running through vmware (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It looks like it's running through vmware (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:It looks like it's running through vmware (Score:2)
Default CDE desktop (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Default CDE desktop (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Default CDE desktop (Score:2)
Re:Default CDE desktop (Score:2)
Re:Default CDE desktop (Score:2)
Here comes the sun! (Score:5, Funny)
I installed it (Score:5, Interesting)
Solaris 10 is a great technical computing or server OS. GNU/Linux has some advantages over it, for example debian's package system and free organisation. Overall Linux is easier to get up and running. Knoppix is trivial to boot. Paths and default executable placement are simpler in Linux. Linux is more ported. X11 support seams better in most Linux distros. (X worked fine thoughout my install, but when i rebooted, my display was messed up and I had to console login and set X to a lower resolution) Virtual consoles are a big plus when X gets messed up, and solaris misses them badly.
But Solaris has some cool features. Zones, dtrace, exellent SMP support, and surprisingly, a great price/performance ratio. I donno how well sun will do (I would guess they'll make some money in the short term on Opeteron systems and probably in the long term with Fujitsu massivly multi-core SPARC). But the current market for used sun workstations/servers is great because of Sun's overall decline. I was able to get (on ebay) a quad 450mhz ultrasparcII box with 2 gigs of ram, and dual 36 gig scsi drives, quad redundent power supples (800 watt), etc: for a measily $200. Solaris 10 installed great. Sun hardware is built to withstand hell and admins, students, hobbiests, or whoever, who normally couldn't afford this quality should really check it out. I also actually like CDE and the old Motief look. It's clean, simple, easy to work with, and doesn't try to be Microsoft Windows or MacOS.
Re:I installed it (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I installed it (Score:3, Interesting)
1) Runs well as a server
2) Runs well as CLI desktop
3) Runs ok as a desktop of you like to fiddle
4) Works seamless with random peripehrals (ie OSX)
I already know it does 1 and 2 better than (gasp) PC BSD, I'm assuming 3) but until it's at 4) Apple will continue to sell a lot of hardware. That's gonna be the one to beat and as OSX gets better (hire Brian Reid, you morons) Apple as a unix distro company will continue it's ascendancy despite t
I too installed it (Score:4, Interesting)
In addition,it was good to see the slick JDS3. Two things stood out after the installation of S10 -
1) The installer was a lot easier than was made out by S10-flamers at
2)S10 is not just for admins who telnet to the machine and issue arcane incantations. JDS3 make S10 a strong candidate for a corporate desktop. Add a Sun Ray to it, and you have a sure-fire windoze killer.
And running my apps on S10 has been, without doubt, one of the greatest joys of life.There isn't enough room here on
Re:I installed it (Score:2)
Yeah, I second that. pkg-get is one of the cleanest package tools I've used. Launch it, walk away for a while, come back, and all the dependent packages are there all nice and tidy.
Still with CDE? (Score:5, Informative)
Is it really that hard to transition people off CDE? Are there actually that many people that are that heavily wedded to CDE? Provide some legacy support, sure, but shouldn't GNOME (aka JDS) be the default by now? Why are they still mentioning CDE as anything other than a minor product they've attached on some extra CDs as support for legacy users?
Jedidiah.
Should be Openlook (Score:3, Insightful)
Speaking as an old school sunOS fan (Anything pre-Solaris), CDE was almost as big a mistake as going sysV for Solaris. Openlook was much better. I never even looked at CDE, it was so ugly on my neighbor's desktop. (I was one of the last to get rid of the ELC off my desk, one of the downsides of being a intern, so I didn't have it as an option for years after a few switched to it)
Their customers (Score:2)
I imagine that once they have good management tools for GNOME they'll push it a bit harder, but even so they can't offer the same sort of stability (in terms of compatible changes only, etc) for GNOME.
Personally, I logged into CDE only to go "gah!" and log back out
Re:Their customers (Score:2)
Believe me, I know - I've worked in exactly such an environment. That doesn't mean they need to keep providing CDE as the default desktop on every new version of the OS.
Back with Solaris 8 there was an extra optional CD that contained all the GNU tools and GNOME. It was easy enough to throw that
Re:Still with CDE? (Score:2)
Re:Still with CDE? (Score:2)
Because you are introducing all your new users to the "joys" of CDE. It hardly represents a good solution, not a migration path (handing new users something you want to migrate away from as the default is not exactly good). Sun can provide CDE up
Re:Still with CDE? (Score:2)
The screenshots show the default CDE desktop at a low resolution. Yep, it looks like crap. But CDE is quite customizable. Probobly the first thing to do is just click the middle mouse button and iconify the ugly app bar, then change the background to something not ugly, then set the resolution to something reasonable.
I have CDE running on Solaris 10 on an old U
Re:Still with CDE? (Score:2)
The time before that when I was using Solaris seriously I went straight to FVWM2 which, at the time, was the most featureful kickass window manager around. And it was still lighter than CDE.
CDE is light on f
Re:Still with CDE? (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the absolutely huge advantages of Sun over, say, Red Hat, is that Sun doesn't pull the carpet out from under their users every three years. OpenWindows stuck around until Solaris 9, I think, which means CDE is good to be around for quite some time. Sun always provides predictable transitions and always documents what will happen in advance for customers to plan ahead.
Sun also has a good record for maintaining compatibility to older versions of Solaris. I was quite pleased to see that older SunPCi IIpro cards can still work under Solaris 10 with JDS (with Windows 98, at least). Officially, these cards are supported only up to Solaris 9.
If I were running a big shop with my behind accountable for more than a year in the future, Sun is not a bad bet.
Re:Still with CDE? (Score:2)
Re:Still with CDE? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Still with CDE? (Score:2)
Jedidiah.
Re:Still with CDE? (Score:4, Interesting)
I just came up with this rather nasty shell script to find out how much memory on my machine is being used for non-code segments in my processes:
sum=$(for pid in $(ps aux | awk '$1 == "sam" {print $2}');
do cat
do test $prot = 'r-xp' && continue;
start=$(echo $addr | sed 's/-.*//');
end=$(echo $addr | sed 's/.*-//');
echo $(( 0x$end - 0x$start ));
done;
done | while read x;
do echo + $x;
done)
echo $(( ($sum) / 1024 / 1024 ))
155
So my session is currently using up 155 MB of non-sharable memory. Actually, this seems rather low, given that I have firefox, thunderbird and azureus all chugging away. Maybe
Can code segments even be shared between processes on i386? I seem to remember reading somewhere that they can't (or, in Linux, aren't)... and looking in
Re:Still with CDE? (Score:2)
I have had to deal with the fact that for some reason a lot of Sun workstations can't cope with more than 8bit color. Perhaps Sun should consider spending an extra 50c on a video card that can manage.
Besides, when I'm in Solaris it means I'm programming. When I'm programming I could not possibly care less about window dressing.
I care about window
Mirrors that work (Score:2, Informative)
http://mirrordot.com/stories/bd9596e27c5d2177fc81b 2a5512c1927/index.html [mirrordot.com]
http://mirrordot.com/stories/1ffb4724d2b03ba41edc9 790016d2b3c/index.html [mirrordot.com]
http://mirrordot.com/stories/e1f77e936894905cc5b8d 90e96d46066/index.html [mirrordot.com]
http://mirrordot.com/stories/48ae8a91c0515178981a2 23b6721551b/index.html [mirrordot.com]
http://mirrordot.com/stories/b6d219bc646a2c95a1da6 66659518e10/index.html [mirrordot.com]
Real Picture of Kernel (Score:5, Funny)
My own Solaris 10 experience (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:My own Solaris 10 experience (Score:3, Interesting)
Which suggests you were using an earlier beta/Express version. In which case try the GA release, it is faster.
Install Walkthrough (Score:2, Insightful)
vi
add_install_client
boot net - install
There you are, the installation walkthrough for jumpstarting Solaris. Tune in for our next episode, when we cover logging onto the console.
Other features? (Score:5, Insightful)
CD/DVD writing,
wireless cards,
PCMCIA/Cardbus devices,
USB hotswapping (i.e. does it pop up and say you've plugged a USB HDD in and offer to mount it?),
Input types (i.e. Japanese, Chinese, etc.).
I've recently been trying out many Linux distros (FC3, SuSE 9.2, Mandrake (latest -- 10.1?), Gentoo and Debian) to check out how well they handle these things. So far I've been most impressed with Ubuntu. As a long-time FreeBSD user I have been very impressed how things have advanced with Linux in the last four or five years.
I'm aware how well Solaris 10 cuts it in the server arena but does it even come close to the likes of FC, SuSE and Ubuntu for desktop use?
Re:Other features? (Score:2)
It has a nice standardized kernel, many commercial drivers out there are designed to plug into its kernel, like the numerous telecom equipment. Solaris also has arguably the best threading implementation, and the kernel works better than most OSes, including Linux, on SMP and massively
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Other features? (Score:2)
I haven't tried it, yet, but it looks like there is support for Windows-like CD burning in the Nautilus ("This Computer") application. There is also Windows-like printer management, which is nice.
Re:Other features? (Score:2)
NT4 Green (Score:2)
Where did I grasp that idea that there was a 3D desktop concept growing - something that would in fact justify the financial and noise - toll of a "current" graphic card for me if I could dolly and rotate my desktop environment, building galaxies and clusters of desktop links, windows and whatever and let me dive through it like I dive through Celestia?
A pipe dream,
When will people learn... (Score:2)
Or at least post a mirror instead?
Seriously.... (Score:4, Insightful)
"know about the licensing issues" - what is that supposed to mean? That because it doesnt use GPL but another OSI approved license it is an "issue"?
"Have something going on here" - well, if that aint flamebait I dont know what is. Yes, Sun have a high quality OS that integrates GNOME and a host of other FOSS software with appropriate licensing and acknoledgements and because you think it looks like _your_ "linux" desktop (and not KDE or blackbox or fvwm or tvm) they are supposedly doing something dastardly?
And really, if OS install snapshots were news worthy, whatever you do dont look at docs.sun.com, there are just too many consipiricies there to report!
Re:Seriously.... (Score:5, Funny)
Like this:
"... 1010111000110
Just installed on Ultra-60 (Score:5, Informative)
I know I'm a bit late in the conversation, but anyway...
It's amazing that this story is up today, as I just spent the weekend loading Solaris 10 on my Ultra-60. It had been running Debian, but I thought it might be fun to run Sun's OS on Sun's hardware. :)
I have run Solaris 8 in the past. That just seemed like a bunch of junk to me. The main problem was that my main "unix" experience was Linux and IRIX. So, missing most of the commands and options I wanted, I was a bit dissapointed.
I'd just like to say, though, that it looks like Sun really has done quite a bit of work on this new version. The only reason it took me "all weekend" to install Solaris 10 was that the only SCSI CD-ROM drive I have is a 1x or 2x, and I can't trust my x86 box to stay up for longer than an hour any more (it's had a _rough_ life). The install process itself, though, is easy.
Once installed, I fiddled around a bit as root to make sure everything was working. I stuck with CDE for root loggin, just in case something was broken in JDS. CDE is exactly the same as it has always been, for those worried about it. I used the Sun Management Console to setup a new user - slick. The only thing I don't like about SMC is that it seems a bit lacking on features. What it has is good, but I think there could be a lot more in there.
With my normal user created, I logged in and setup JDS. I had been running Gnome in Debian, so I was pleased with how my desktop was setup. It runs very nicely. A bit of logging on to the web, and I had added Firefox. A bit more tooling around, and I had my printer working. It really does seem like Sun has gone to the trouble of making the things that people commonly do easy to do, or at least making them function like they would in other environments.
Now the only thing I'm missing is a way to move the data that I had in Linux over to the Solaris partition. Unfortunately I was using ext2/3 in Linux, so I can't mount it out of the box. I've found the LXRUN utils, but they say they're for x86. Probably a bit of hacking away at source code in my future. We'll see if that's even possible. If anyone here has a better idea - post it?
Next up for this machine: second processor and more RAM. Then maybe a SunPCi board ... just because I can. :)
Re:Another name for Java Desktop 3 is .... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Slashdotted already? (Score:2)
Learn to copy/paste properly..
Re:Solaris for the masses? (Score:5, Insightful)
But is there any way that Solaris has a chance to grow enough to become any kind of threat to MS?
What? People run Windows on big iron?
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Solaris for the masses? (Score:3, Informative)
Like FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, Darwin, etc., are "drains" on "Linux developers"?
Actually it is more like the reverse. Sun has underwritten the NFS v4 implementation that is in the Linux 2.6 kernel, as well donated large amounts of code that help make Linux stronger, like Open Office, Internationalization code for X, etc. If it wasn't for Sun, Linux would be weaker. A large amount of useful code in Linux today is only there due
Re:Perfect OS world (Score:2)
Re:Perfect OS world (Score:2)
Your clueless.
They use something like a virtual machine thats FAST so a programmer only needs ONE driver to run on all operating systems.
Re:Perfect OS world (Score:2)
I meant
Re:Perfect OS world (Score:2, Insightful)
And you don't have to have another layer in front of the apps to concieve such interoprability. You just need to follow standards. Preferably ones that make sense. There are many techniques, and a virtual environment is just one of them.
Re:Perfect OS world (Score:4, Funny)
ROFL.
This may be the start of a new type of troll on /. You are really inspired. Look at all the people who are biting. I'm amazed.
This is like a combination of the "is it good or is it whack?" troll with a dash of universal "your os sucks" troll sprinkled with a bit of "not trying to be a troll here but can someone explain to me ..."
and you even manage to add in a signature troll. WOW. You are good.
Re:Perfect OS world (Score:2)
Your so funny.
Rofl.
Re:Perfect OS world (Score:2)
Magic ?
We have plug and play hardware. We also need it for software.
Re:Perfect OS world (Score:2)
I think their idea is superb. And i do not work for them.
Rewriting drivers for each operating system is a pain in the ass.
Re:Perfect OS world (Score:2)
http://www.scitechsoft.com/products/dev/sdk_dow
Re:Sun to kill Linux? (Score:2)
Still, I suppose this is the first ``real'' attempt so we can but wait and see...
Re:Sun to kill Linux? (Score:2)
Excuse me, but where exactly does it say that Sun is trying to kill linux? With references please. Also note that Sun competing with companies who build distros is a completely different thing.
Tp.
Re:Solaris 10 lies by Sun (Score:2)
Well, Anonymous Coward, I look forward to seeing you eat your words some time in Calender Q2 this year.
You make mention of www.opensolaris.org [opensolaris.org] . Have you actually read anything on it?
I do hope you signed up for the notification.
You may also notice on that site that to show that we are not going to keep the new and cool stuff closed, that the entire source to dtrace is present on that site as a download. The work is ongoing to ensure that we open what we have the rights to open.
Tp.
Re:pxe boot from linux? (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.docbert.org/Solaris/Jumpstart/linux.
The author knows what he is talking about - I havent tried it myself but this ought to be what you need.
Re:Umm, there's something missing (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Install (from scratch) still a PITA (Score:4, Funny)
Don't worry. I've been doing them for 20 years now, probably done a few thousand in that time on maybe twenty or thirty different hardware platforms. Never had a problem, and I tell you, it's all about having a system. That's what you have to do, figure out a system. And then never, never, depart from it, no matter what the voices say. Just be cool.
Sure, I admit that I'm tempted sometimes to just type random stuff, but I've been totally able to control myself, no problem, just answer the questions. Ever since they took me out of detox the last time. I didn't like it there. It's not just the smell, it's the people. They have such a bad attitude. They're not positive. I need positive energy.
I had to know a few things, like what language I spoke, what timezone I was in, did I want to install everything or just a basic workstation. It is all a bit irritating, I admit. You'd think the installation script would just know that stuff. After all, it's pretty pathetic. It's like you're stupid or something.
I wish it would ask me some hard questions when it did its localization, like whether there really were weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, whether my girlfriend would really like to be in a threesome or is she just saying that to see if I'm faithful, whether virus recognition merely NP-hard (as someone once tried to argue with me) or formally undecidable.
I don't think I'm a "certified Solaris Installation Engineer"; certainly I never had any training. Maybe there was some kind of coupon in the packaging that granted me that title automatically. Sorry if Sun didn't ship you one of those, because I don't see why you wouldn't be equally qualified to reason about the questions asked during system installation. I know I am. I'm cool. I've got the system. Figured it out. Figured it out.
But then, I don't usually eat the dessicant pack either. Though it does look kind of edible, doesn't it? Those sparkly little crystals and all... Could be good, and how can you know for sure if you don't try them? The label clearly states "DESSICANT -- DO NOT EAT" but that's probably just legalese. See if they can suck you in, right. They all try that. It's a power thing. Don't fall for it.
Re:Alright (Score:4, Interesting)
Seriously, there are better ways to launch a program than navigating huge hierarchical menus, praying your mouse doesn't wobble and lose couple of levels. Windows 95, NextStep and MacOSX each introduced serious improvements in usability of computers, but why stop innovation there and just rip off old ideas?
I wrote a little program for Mac [netgate.net] that I think is easier to use than either Start menu or Dock. Not a rocket science or even a new idea, but I am not the one with billions for research. I am sure modern processing power, new technologies and research can yield interfaces that don't look anything like Xerox PARC and are dramatically more productive. Keyboards with dynamically changing LED key labels? Fuzzy logic to recognize faster, inexact user commands? Some hybrid of UI and command line to let user see information from many programs in a small space? I don't know, but Sun and Microsoft should find out.
Re:Okay really, why OpenSolaris over Linux? (Score:3, Informative)
Admittedly the current desktop implementation is lagging from some Linux distos, but this is arguably easier to "fix" than rewrite a kernel.