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From what I understand sound support on UNIX is best found in ALSA. Exverywhere else just sucks, and from my experience anything but a few Creative cards in linux and you're out of luck.
We can't really blame the current devs, few of them have any free hardware and fewer have the hardware docs to do anything with the cards.
Argh, sorry for going off topic. My great sound card with breakout box, hardware eq, opt. and spdif in/out is useless under linux, and sound terrible because their's no hardware mixing support.
The only thing missing for me from desktop x86 UNIX(-like) (that's not tied down to hardware like os x) is the lack of decent sound support. For a few cards I know it's incredibly good, studio quality recording and mixing in some caes, but just about everything else falls to the wayside.
As for the debian side of things, I can't find anything on their main website that mentions anything about debian. Are you thinking of GNU/kFreeBSD maybe?
> Argh, sorry for going off topic. My great sound card with breakout box, hardware eq, opt. and spdif in/out is useless under linux, and sound terrible because their's no hardware mixing support.
What is your sound card?. Have you tried the OSS drivers?. They have builtin mixing - they work great on Solaris x86.
It's a modified CS46xx. Hercules Game Theater XP 7.1 is the card.
Support for it under OSS is worse than ALSA. Herucles doens't even make x64 windows drivers for it so if I get Softimage|XSI foundation in the next year or so, with 64 bit support I might upgrade sound card before hand so windows x64 will support the card.
Have you given OpenSound a go? they have a free personal edition available for download - maybe your hardware will be supported through that? from what I understand, OpenSound 4.0 has been given a major overhaul - too bad, however, SUN speeds too much time re-inventing the wheel when a few million could buy out OpenSound, opensource the API and provide it free of charge with Solaris (and sell licences for other operating systems).
Maybe, maybe not, but this troll at least works in the Solaris world and not in the not existing, legal violating GNU/Solaris world like Nexenta.
SchilliX is Solaris as much as it is possible today.
Maybe there will be other persons who will help Joerg "marketing" his distro while he can concentrate on the technical things like SPS what he can do better.
"This project will die...Because Joerg Schilling is somebody that no one else can work with. He's aggressive and he isn't able to work in a team."
If this were true, OpenBSD wouldn't have survived either.
Sometimes it takes a stong, individualist leader to take a project where it needs to go.
That's too bad. Setting up the PATH is really simple stuff, but I don't understand: is there absolutely nothing in PATH? That is, what do you see when you type
echo $PATH
for the root user, and then for a non-root user? Is it possible that noprofile script is executed at logon?
I don't know what's in the default $PATH(Running Zenwalk Linux ATM) but from their site,
url: http://www.schillix.org/packages.html
HowTo install packages
Ok, this is very easy. There are 3 steps to install a given package from the list above
1. Download the package to your disk
# wget http://www.schillix.de/packages/screen-4.0.2.tar.bz2
2. Unpack the package with star
# star xvf screen-4.0.2.tar.bz2 -bz -C /
3. Set the default library search path with "crle"
# crle -l /lib:/usr/lib:/usr/X11R6/lib:/opt/gcc-3.4.3/lib
Edited 2005-11-23 02:30
Actually, Sun really doesn't care what software you run since they don't really make much (if any) money on Solaris. Sun just wants you to buy their hardware and hopefully their support contracts. They don't care if you run Linux, *BSD, Solaris, OpenSolaris, or even Windows on their hardware as long as you buy their hardware.
Oh, and have you ever open sourced a proprietary operating system containing hundreds, if not thousands, of things that you've licensed from others? I didn't think so, Sun said from the beginning that they are going to open source ALL of Solaris that they legally can and so far I think they've done a pretty damn good job of living up to that promise. It's a massive amount of code to go through and it is going to take some time.
And you my friend seem to want us to believe your FUD...
And as much as I prefer OpenSource over Propietary Software, I understand that, like many OpenSource projects it will be when ready and not necesarilly on someone's roadmap, and Besides, OpenSolaris Is here in the form of Nexenta, SchiliX and other OpenSolaris based systems.
Edited 2005-11-22 19:42
FUD= (Fear uncertainty and doubt) Spreding misinformation to make people change their minds.
Opinion = A person's or group's point of view of a topic but not necesarily a credible truth.
Saying that "Sun wants us all to use propietary software" IS spreading FUD, in my opinion.
However, it it's not my intention to feed a flame war so this is my last comment on defining what FUD and Opinion mean.
That's a very good comment, many Linux geeks spread FUD.
I know Sun doesn't want us to use proprietary software. They have Open Office and now OpenSolaris. They would rather we bought their commercial versions, but they would rather we used the open ones than MS Office and Windows.
But I do like to spread uncertainty and doubt about Sun, personally, because if you aren't affraid, if you don't consider the possibility that Sun isn't looking out for you, or doesn't actually care about Open Source, you might give Sun more money than they deserve.
Sun has recently fixed a lot of the problems with their business, so I'm not nearly as affraid as I was around 2002. But I still don't trust them.
However, I do trust them more than Microsoft, FWIW.
I'm just worried about the businesses Sun likes to partner with, like Microsoft and SCO. Why not partner with IBM and HP? That would certainly make me feel more comfortable.
Just a question; I'm having one hell of a time trying to install Solaris 10 onto a Dell Dimension 8400 desktop computer - the problem first starts with the detection of USB devices; if I suddenly pull them (keyboard and mouse) and put them back in, whilst the kernel loads, they seem to start working again.
Once installed; the installation fails to load, complaining about the hard disk - this hard disk is not faulty; Linux works on it without any problems; the firmware is updated to the latest version, the hard disk is SATA, however, the RAID has been disabled.
Anyone at sun can give me a heads up on it? Oh, btw its a 925X Intel chipset.
I am not sure if what I'm going to tell you will help or not, but I had problems installing Solaris 10 on a computer with a PATA drive that was set as "SATA" in the BIOS. It would work fine with windows but not with the Solaris 10 installer.
When I set it to PATA in the BIOS, it all worked perfectly, and it has now 65 days uptime (and we use it for performance testing of our other computers, so it's quite a bit stressed out).
Anyone else sick of this "Because I can" mentality prevalent in the current Open Source OS arena now a days? Schilix looks like it is keeping close to compatability to Solaris but just making a slim-down install process, so power to them. But Nexenta? What is the POINT? Tell me why I would want to goto a Ubuntu distro with a Solaris Kernel swapped in instead? This just irks me. If you like Ubuntu/linux/GNU so darn much then USE IT. You want the Solaris Kernel then use Solaris Express and keep the integrated userland with it.
I am constantly amazed at how much energy and effort is spent on irrelevant projects and/or dumb "spin-offs". WHY people? "Because you can" and "it's the beauty of open source" has spun out of control to the point of massive anarchy and seems to keep getting worse.
This is how commercial software will continue to rule the world and why Microsoft isn't going anywhere. Just about everything in the Open Source world seems to be a fork of something else but nothing ever seems to GAIN ground because of duplicated effort over and over. I had hoped that Solaris users wouldn't have this mentality.
Hi,
Some people may want to use the Solaris kernel, but are used to the GNU userland tools. Hence they want to integrate the userland tools. After all the GNU tools are independent of the kernel and can be used with any kernel. When you say that you want to use different OSes for different things, you generally refer to the Kernel. Even stability refers to the kernel stability. Hardware support also refers to the kernel hardware support.
Hope that clears some confusion ;^)
>I am constantly amazed at how much energy and effort is spent on irrelevant projects and/or dumb "spin-offs". WHY people? "Because you can" and "it's the beauty of open source" has spun out of control to the point of massive anarchy and seems to keep getting worse.
If you ever browse through Source Forge I think you will find 90% of the projects there are a solution looking for a problem. I don't see a problem with massive anarchy, I think the problem is with the ideology and the expectations.
Ask yourself, why do people participate in OSS projects?



