
Wow! With Solaris 10, Sun Microsystems has done a marvelous job of bringing Solaris fully into the x86 world. Gone are the days when Solaris only runs on Sun hardware or when it only runs well on Sun hardware. Solaris 10 comes with greatly expanded off-the-shelf x86 hardware compatibility and a license that is hard to beat. It's a binary right to use and Open Solaris, the open source version is soon to come. IT Managers that have been wanting to bring a stable, scalable Operating Environment into their network infrastructures, but who have been unwilling to commit to the Sun hardware platform, for various reasons, are now free, pun intended, to bring Solaris on board and to run it on the hardware of their choice.
Solaris Containers: Cool
DTrace:Blah
Project Janus: Big Blah
ZFS: Very Cool
Predictive Self Healing: Cool if it works however my guess is it will be a feature turned off my most SA's
FireEngine: About time
I would like to see a more in-depth review of Solaris 10, but I guess I'll have to wait for Solaris to become mainstream.
This is the funniest statement i have read in a long time..Wait for Solaris to become mainstream thats funny.
Torvalds nailed it when he said that opening up Solaris didn't mean THAT much... x86 support is still terrible (haven't been able to install it on 3 different boxes that are all linux/windows friendly) so you're either stuck with a shortlist of x86 components or Sun HW.
Give them a year or two besides Solaris x86 will run on commercial hardware packages like Dell,HP etc first like it always has. Solaris x86 installs flawlessly on HP/Compaq Proliant hardware.
The more UNIX, the better.
Amen Brother!