Sun Java Desktop 2 Review 304
Anon. writes "Linux.com is carrying a pretty damning review of Sun Java Desktop System version 2. JDS seemed to have issues with almost each and every machine the author tested it on, support was quite bad - and to top it all, the software comes with a seven page license document. Something seems to be terribly wrong somewhere - otherwise why would Sun decide to ship JDS with kernel 2.4.19 at this stage?" (Slashdot and Linux.com are both part of OSDN.)
Kernel versions are very often "behind" (Score:5, Insightful)
I dunno. Why are you not asking a similar question of Debian???
Re:Kernel versions are very often "behind" (Score:5, Informative)
Because Debian has pre-built images and source packages for up to and including 2.6.5 and 2.4.26?
Re:Kernel versions are very often "behind" (Score:3, Funny)
I don't know... kids today...
Re:Kernel versions are very often "behind" (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Kernel versions are very often "behind" (Score:2)
Re:Kernel versions are very often "behind" (Score:2)
Re:Kernel versions are very often "behind" (Score:3, Funny)
Haha, thats hillarious. Mmmmmmm, Sun is baaad.. Mmmmkay?
Re:Kernel versions are very often "behind" (Score:4, Insightful)
On the other hand, the chances of a corporate entity rolling out a lot of cutting edge desktops like the power users bitching about this are having problems with is REALLY unlikely. Personally, I'm running JDS 2 on my Sony VAIO PCG-K15 laptop which I just bought three weeks ago, and there were two problems, neither of them particularly difficult. 1) to get video drivers for the ATI 354M ICG card I had to download some mods from SuSE which were not terribly difficult to find (and the default drivers worked, they just didn't give me full color depth and resolution), and 2) to use the Atheron wireless chipset I had to use the madwifi drivers available from sourceforge. I bring up the interfaces manually because the stupid dhcpcd when it tries to run on two interfaces and only one is active, the inactive one stupidly copies the "original" resolv.conf back over after it times out--of course this isn't Sun's fault.
I dunno, these power user "negative" reviews of JDS because it's not the latest and greatest cutting edge stuff just don't seem to get it. JDS is (as far as I can tell anyway) primarily targetted at corporate windows users, not Linux power users.
And of course, I'm just speaking off the top of my head; while I do work for Sun, I am not part of the JDS product groups, nor do I speak in any official capacity for Sun.
Seven page license document? (Score:5, Funny)
not that surprising (Score:2, Interesting)
here is why they'd use 2.4.19 (Score:5, Insightful)
Java Desktop R2 seems to be more of an upgrade to the bundled apps. Nothing really major here.
Re:here is why they'd use 2.4.19 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:here is why they'd use 2.4.19 (Score:3, Insightful)
Whitebox linux (RH Enterprise 3 recompiled from the SRPS) ships with kernel 2.4.20-8.
BTW, poster of the story could have told us if it's a stock 2.4.19 kernel or a modified/security fixes backported kernel.
Re:here is why they'd use 2.4.19 (Score:2)
I guess now I see (Score:2)
Re:here is why they'd use 2.4.19 (Score:3, Funny)
From the brochure:
"Impervious to application faults, security breaches, and even normal usage! Here's one platform that even the most clueless user can't harm. If that's not compelling enough think of all you'll save on administration! Finally, true zero touch zero cost administration!"
Brought to you by Premier Executive Marketing Solutions, Inc. Ltd. LLC. OBE, CMH, IMHO, Esquire
Disclosure (Score:5, Funny)
Maybe they have to say in the box to use any Windows PC to read the manual before install.
The problem here seems to be hardware support... (Score:5, Interesting)
Trouble with hard disks, especially SATA but also regular ATA, seems to be a common problem this guy is having. That should not be a problem with any modern Linux distro, and why Java Desktop manages to screw it up I suppose we'll see.
I'm waiting for the next version.
Media Bias (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Media Bias (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Media Bias (Score:5, Interesting)
I tried different hard drives on different computers. I tried four different configurations, three of which were distinctly different. Sun could have easily updated the kernel in JDS2 but they chose not to.
It's not my fault they shipped a prehistoric kernel. Did you expect me to write a puff piece on an operating environment that doesn't work on all of my test equipment?
-Jem
Re:Media Bias (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Media Bias (Score:3, Interesting)
Probably two reasons: IBM has been generous, including GPLing some code (JFS, maybe more) and putting many people on kernel work (see the output:
And we definitly don't like SCO even though they are a little guy. My guess a major part of the animosity shown toward Sun is that they won't GPL Java (see RMS on that issue).
But w
Re:Media Bias (Score:5, Informative)
With sun you have the obvious OpenOffice and NFS. They've also open sourced a lot of other software and have provided resources for other projects. Have a look at http://www.sunsource.net/ to see how much Sun contributes to open source projects. [sunsource.net] People don't like some of the licenses Sun uses because it gives Sun too much control still. Having something GPL'd doesn't make that any better. Just look at what happend with Emacs and XEmacs when a company started paying the FSF to make enhancements to Emacs that they needed but had an uphill battle with RMS who had final say into what happened with Emacs. That's when XEmacs was forked out of it.
Sun has contributed a lot of code to Gnome (accessibility api, work on sawfish, improved usability, tons of documentation and help). They do provide kenel patches, Tim Hockins used to be very active on the linux kernel mailing lists when Sun was working on Sun Linux and still supporting Cobalt servers.
Also Sun is pushing a linux desktop, JDS. And it's pushing hard in different areas. Where is IBM in this? IBM's take on linux, provide it with our servers since we can run websphere on it so that websphere seems cheaper because you don't "have" to buy a Windows Server OS.
Also do a search on the kernel mailing lists. You'll see more references to Solaris than to AIX. Sun had published a lot of papers regarding how they did things and these served as a good guide for many linux kernel hackers. You'll see lots of comparisons to how sun does things. Not just how well it performs to solaris but actually details on how it was implemented in solaris, especially in the case where solaris performed better.
Not saying that linux is a rip off of solaris in case anyone misreads that. I'm saying that Sun has a history for supporting open standards and shares a lot of what it knows and people could benefit from that. Tanenbaum
Everyone needs to remember Open Source is not Linux. Sun does a lot with the Apache Software Foundation.
Sun even provides "scholarships" for open source projects and non profit entities to pay for licensing of some of it's technology that for profit entities have to pay for.
Pointing to a list of kernel changes made in one version to indicate that IBM is the better open source participant is a limited view of open source.
I don't listen to much that RMS has to say. Only so many people in this world can be college proffessors, develop software for free and eventually get a few 100k every so often in awards and money in speaking engagments. The majority of software developers need to be able to make money developing software, they don't have the luxury of clinging to such lofty ideals. How far would all of this gone if RMS had a family to support? Maybe this is why RMS has no family to support? According to him, his child is the GNU project. How many of you can do something like that? Nothing against RMS, it takes a lot of dedication to do what he's doing but it's not very practical for everyone to be doing that.
The Java Community Process Sun set up is pretty good. Individual membership is free. You can help guide the direction of Java. It helps keep things from really going to far astray the way Sun set it up. Which is good for the people that build apps on Java.
Open sourcing Java doesn't really do much for the developer community as most developers build on top of Java, not in it. The people that would benefit would be people like IBM, BEA and Oracle as well as OS companies. The majority of the developer community is made up of the ones building their apps on top of j2se and j2ee. Open Source some great tools and then you're talking. Sun opensourced NetBeans. There's a lot of debate over NetBeans vs IBM's Eclipse. I'v
A bit irresponsible (Score:5, Interesting)
I guess Sun deserves what it gets, but I think the reviewer was a bit irresponsible. Perhaps he had a deadline and couldn't wait around for replacement media (assuming that you still couldn't rule out defective media) or for Sun support to resolve the issue. I think however that it would have been a much more useful review if the reader found out exactly why the reviewer couldn't get it installed on all but one machine and couldn't get it to run on the machine on which it did install.
I'm left wondering if it wasn't in fact defective media, and just how bad Sun's support is: meaning, what does it take to get a problem resolved.
Re:A bit irresponsible (Score:2)
Re:A bit irresponsible (Score:5, Insightful)
He did everything right.
First, he made a reasonable attempt to install it. He tried several computers; he tried both the graphical interface and the text one. If there had been a "check media" option (like RedHat's installer has), I'll assume he would have used it, given the other steps he took. Defective media is understandable. But we don't know that's the problem, because they didn't provide a way to check. Why not?
Then he called support. He didn't use any special reviewers-only support channel. He called the normal number like everyone else has to. He got the same horrible support experience. And he criticized them for it. Why do we just let large companies off for having horrible support? Why don't we yell and scream until they do better?
Re:A bit irresponsible (Score:5, Insightful)
Whether or not you think the reviewer could have done more -- the reviewer definately did more than Joe User would. If a reviewer 'only' tried installation on three or four computers, that's still three or four more than most people have access to.
pretty sluggish on a relatively powerful machine (Score:5, Informative)
It's so sluggish on this particular machine.
SUSE 9.1 Live CD works better on this particular machine.
That's what I've experienced.
asdf
Dead company walking... (Score:3, Interesting)
Their hardware is more expensive, and slower.
Their OS is less feature rich, but has more bugs, and doesn't perform as well in most cases as Linux.
Look around, everyone who possibly can is getting off of Suns and onto Linux x86. The major things holding most of Suns customers back in this regard are proprietary software support, and that's improving all the time.
And as to Java... I'm not sure exactly how they intend to make money there... IBM does the Java services market SOOOO much better than Sun does.
Re:Dead company walking... (Score:5, Informative)
Slower for single-threaded cache-bound apps, absolutely. But Sun hardware has superior multiprocessor performance, scalability, and memory bandwidth. It is also far more reliable. I point you to this anecdotal story [photo.net]about what happened when photo.net moved from Sun to Dell hardware.
Their OS is less feature rich, but has more bugs, and doesn't perform as well in most cases as Linux.
Oh man, Solaris has far more enterprise features than Linux. Intimate shared memory, a performance counter interface, hot-swappable CPU support, a solid device driver interface, the list goes on and on. And the future is multiprocessors...Sun has a huge advantage with Solaris as it readily scales beyond 100 processors out-of-the-box. The Linux stock kernel scales to what, 8 processors maybe, until falling flat on its face due to lock contention.
well... (Score:2)
Re:Dead company walking... (Score:2)
I don't think that's true, I think 2.6 scales to 16 processors.
2.6 supports the Intel MP 1.1 spec, which defines 16-way SMP.
Not that I have ever tried it, but I suspect you need to check your "what,
Linux has those features too (Score:3, Interesting)
We call this hugetlb, or did. The name keeps changeing. All this really means is that you support shared memory locked into RAM, hopefully with some sort of large-page notion.
a performance counter interface
We call this oprofile. We also have the user-space kcachegrind and the perfmon patch, so you get some choice on Linux.
hot-swappable CPU support
We have this too. It works great on IBM's zSeries mainframe. Oh, PC hardware? Solaris can't do that either because the hardware wil
Re:Linux has those features too (Score:4, Informative)
Your "beyond 100" is nothing to a 512-way SGI Altix running Linux. There are 1024-way systems under development. Sun can't touch this.
Even the Altix doesn't touch this - its a supercluster system. The suggested configuration for individual nodes is pretty small - a max of 12 or 16 processors. You can specify up to 256 processors, but its unlikely to scale well unless you are using specialised application code.
the future is SMP (Score:2, Informative)
Clusers don't share memory, making them a pain to program for. Clusters require more space, power, parts, and so on. SMP is getting cheap. Linux does a damn fine job with a few dozen CPUs.
First of all, you can get hyperthreading. By treating one CPU as two, you typically get an extra 30% of performance. (it varies greatly by load)
Second of all, multi-core chips are coming in about a year. This gives you multiple fully-independent CPUs on a single chip.
Third of al
Re:Dead company walking... (Score:4, Informative)
Chip for chip the UltraSparc is slower:
1.28Ghz Ultra IIIi (the newest Sun chip for which
I can get spec benchmarks):
Specint: 704
http://www.specbench.org/cpu2000/results/res
Specfp: 1063
http://www.specbench.org/cpu2000/results/re
Opteron 146:
Specint: 1354
http://www.specbench.org/cpu2000/results/re
Specfp: 1394
http://www.specbench.org/cpu2000/results/re
So the Opteron is about twice as fast at int and 30% faster at float. So while you can get more processors from Sun than an x86 base, you may not get more performance.
Re:Dead company walking... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Dead company walking... (Score:2)
Re:Dead company walking... (Score:2, Interesting)
> Sun's pretty much a dead company walking.
The supposedly dead company has 7 billion dollars in the bank with practically negligible amount of debt,
and is still making $10+ billion revenue a year.
> Their OS is less feature rich, but has more bugs, and doesn't perform as well in most cases as Linux.
There's absolutely no proof or ev
Re:Dead company walking... (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, now all they need to do is spend the 6 billion in cash they have and stop grossing 1+ bill in revenue per quarter.
Their hardware is more expensive, and slower.
Do 400,000+ transactions per hour 24/7 on your home built pc and get back to me.
Their OS is less feature rich, but has more bugs, and doesn't perform as well in most cases as Linux.
I guess if you want your corporate IT department to rival that of a medium sized College, you could squeeze extra perf
Re:Dead company walking... (Score:4, Informative)
Umm... if you check their financials you'll see they only have about 2.7 billion in cash:
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/ks?s=SUNW
And they are carrying about 1.47 Billion in debt. Given that they ran a negative cashflow of -20 million dollars last year, they could keep this up for some time. You revenue is irrelavent, it's your earnings and cash flow that count.
Do 400,000+ transactions per hour 24/7 on your home built pc and get back to me.
That must be why there are no Sun boxes in the TPC-C top ten.
http://www.tpc.org/tpcc/results/tpcc_perf_results. asp
I guess if you want your corporate IT department to rival that of a medium sized College, you could squeeze extra performance out of Linux.
Or you could field twice that many people managing your relationships with the proprietary providers of the software you need. In most cases it's the proprietary code that is the bottleneck (in my experience in industry). Or you could also field extra sysadmins to work on compiling and integrating all the FOSS programs that your users actually need that Solaris doesn't ship with.
Oh... and working around the issues and problems with Solaris, like the fact that they screwed up their version of BPF so badly that the libpcap folks found it was faster to filter in user space. Or the fact that their packet sniffing interface doesn't hand over the whole frame received, but trunkates it for you to the size indicated by the ethernet header making them useless for certain kinds of tasks. Or the million and one other little things that are broken in Solaris that will NEVER be fixed.
Re:Dead company walking... (Score:2)
Available distros suck ATM (Score:4, Interesting)
1) Debian sarge release was pushed further on - and you have to go via knoppix to install Debian on a modern SATA machine, leaving the system in a messy state. Obviously the Debian (non-)release is a standing joke, but Sarge will be so late, it's not even funny anymore
2) FC2 was released, and it has several showstopper bugs (it keeps on crashing for me, it eats partition tables for dinner, keyboard layouts don't work, etc, etc). I'm sticking with FC1. FC1, OTOH, seriously rocks, once you beef it up with KDE 3.2 and kernel 2.6. FC1 is the best Linux I've ever used, and I was hoping it wouldn't stay that way after FC2
3) Suse is still non-free-beer. Come on Novell, letting hobbyists dabble with it at home isn't going to hurt anyone.
So what's left, then? Mandrake, Gentoo? Warez version of RHEL? WBEL?
And on the topic of JDS: they are always thrashed in reviews, but the media keeps hyping how "integrated" the system is, and finally Linux is of commercial quality. Go figure.
Re:Available distros suck ATM (Score:5, Informative)
SuSE is free-as-in-beer, but you don't get an ISO install. Got to use the FTP installer, which is a pain but works. Novell also opened up YAST, the only bit of special sauce that had another license recently.
Re:Available distros suck ATM (Score:2)
For 9.1?
Novell also opened up YAST, the only bit of special sauce that had another license recently.
The graphics & stuff still have a different license, right? I suspect the ISOs still aren't fair game for copying...
You can copy SUSE CDs! (Score:5, Informative)
An email was sent to SUSE to settle an ongoing discussion on the legality of copying the CDs in the local unix/linux newsgroup chile.comp.unix :)
This is from the response email from Frank Schmachel of the SUSE sales team:
Many thanks for your inquiry to our SUSE PreSales Service and your interest in SUSE LINUX.
Most applications that come with the SUSE LINUX distribution are licensed with GPL or LGPL, some have their own licenses.
Each of these licenses applies to the single package it comes with and allows you to make as many copies of the software as you want and give them to whoever you want, provided you do not _sell_ the software. You may sell support for the software, but not the software itself. Also, you have to make the source code available for free.
SUSE LINUX as a Linux distribution is a work with its own rights. Our license can be found on CD1 as /COPYRIGHT.yast. This license too allows
you to make as many copies and installations as you want from one set of
discs, provided you do not long for or get any kind of reward for it. Reward implies value in money, benefit in kind and supply >of services.
This also implies that it is _not_ allowed to install SUSE LINUX on machines that you will sell except that you will sell a full license (boxed CD set and books) with the machine to the customer.
So you can copy the SUSE cds. Why don't they offer the ISOs directly is beyond me. More user familiarization with the product would lead to more recommendations when it comes to buying enterprise-supported linux.
Re:You can copy SUSE CDs! (Score:2, Informative)
I would only take exception to this one line. Certainly you are free to sell GPLed and LGPLed software to your little heart's content. Nor is there a requirement to make the source code available for free. You may charge a reasonable fee to cover the costs of distribution. CDs cost money and the labor
Re:You can copy SUSE CDs! (Score:2)
I think he meant the whole SUSE CD package. True, you can take apache sources, compile it and sell it for a million bucks (and maybe even find a sucker who would buy it :) but they would frown if you take their compilation (SUSE) and sell it for more than "the cost of distribution" (I think there's a further email that I can't find that tou
Re:Available distros suck ATM (Score:3, Informative)
Novell also opened up YAST, the only bit of special sauce that had another license recently.
9.1 will be made open for free download in June. They usually wait a few weeks between putting the retail iso's out there for sale and allowing the free ftp install. All the directories are already there for private/authenticated users.
If you must have a free bootable CD media, you can make one. Take a look at http://www.linuxiso.org/forums/viewtopic.php?t=13 5 67 (mind the gap) for notes on doing it wi
Re:Available distros suck ATM (Score:3, Interesting)
Go ahead and try to use the FTP installer when you have a NIC that is technically supported but requires a 1-line hack [linuxquestions.org] to the Tulip driver to make it work.
The Microsoft MN-130 adapter came out a year ago, and the fix was discovered on November 6, 2003. [redhat.com] Why is it that six months and a major kernel release later, this fix still isn't included in a stock kernel?
Nathan
I'm running mandrake 10 official on my server (Score:2)
Re:I'm running mandrake 10 official on my server (Score:2)
I used an old 7.x version back in the day, and it left me with the feeling that many things were broken in various ways. Mandrake remains very cutting edge, so I have been kinda assuming that the brokenness persists.
I might be wrong, am going to read a few reviews and if they deem it stable enough I'm giving it a go. In principle I like Mandrake-the-company, and their attitude. We'll see how the distro fares.
one of the reasons I like mandrake now (Score:2)
A few months ago Mandrake 10 "community edition" was released. Then when the bugs were shaken out they released "official" which is what I'm running. So you get the cutting-edge software (I really, really wanted a 2.6 kernel) but it's not as half-baked as some of their old releases infamously were.
... maybe I should mention (Score:2)
Re:Available distros suck ATM (Score:2)
SuSE is "free"... while you cannot download an ISO, you can install it for free using the FTP installation method. Not ideal, but it works and once installed, you have a true-to-life SuSE installation.
And, what about Mandrake ? Or Gentoo ? What's wrong with them ? Gentoo 2004.1 is great, works really nicelly and has all the latest packages you'd want in a distro.
Mandrake 10 is also qui
Re:Available distros suck ATM (Score:2)
Re:Available distros suck ATM (Score:4, Informative)
I tried the OS and... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm probably the only one around here who wants to know how a distro functions for the purposes of doing usefull work. Reviews of the install process are pretty pointless, unless your interest is in cloning large numbers of X clients or servers. Next!
Re:I tried the OS and... (Score:5, Insightful)
The guy tried four different systems, two of which were 'hot-rodded,' one of which was a pretty standard budget PC config, and the last of which as an older laptop. I think it's a valid point to illustrate that he couldn't get the thing to successfully install on any of those systems.
And, further, I think it's a valid point to describe the support structure and quality of support he received when trying to resolve the problem.
The install process is important. I've personally grown tired of encountering install processes which require pseudo-arcane knowledge, loads of custom configuration, and hours of hand-holding. Show me something that offers an install that is functional, intuitive, while still offering options for customization, and I'll be impressed.
Re:I tried the OS and... (Score:2)
Re:I tried the OS and... (Score:2, Funny)
or his normal PC
or his bare-bones PC
or his laptop...
Solaris...? (Score:3, Interesting)
I would believe that running JDS on linux is just a prototype, to generate hype especially among the linux crowd.
Sun seems to be going out of its way to implement this on Solaris...perhaps the final incarnation of JDS will be on Solaris itself, without any Linux or GNU code at all, and completely proprietary. It seems that they will say "Linux just isn't up to par, but if you upgrade to the $599 Solaris JDS, all your hardware will work."
Or so it seems.
Re:Solaris...? (Score:2)
I dunno, maybe you're right that this is just a test-bed. Pretty weird way to go about it. But then again we're talking about Sun here.
Re:Solaris...? (Score:2)
-Jem
Re:Solaris...? (Score:2, Informative)
No Problems Here (Score:5, Informative)
Software
Hardware
Not that big of deal... (Score:3, Informative)
Keep in mind JDS was a rebranded SuSE distro. SuSE Server 8 ships with the same kernel, so no real surprises there. I'd chalk it up to Sun wanting to invest the minimum amount of skin to get something up and running that also had a fair amount of application support.
As for why they did not just fold in the latest-greatest 2.6 kernel, I have an idea. I recently rebuilt my workstation and decided to go the Gentoo route with the 2.6 kernel. Got a new laptop and installed the new SuSE Server 9 beta with the same. All was good, until I tried shoveling on the first of the commercial software. DB2 v8.1 just had a fit with the GUI installer. With a wee bit of elbow grease I got it going, but I don't even know if my code is going to work yet, much less the app server and ldap. It should, but...
(Stir Crazy voice)The 2.4.19 kernel - safe, not sexy.
what sort of user is Sun targetting? (Score:4, Interesting)
The real advantage may be in work-groups that have loads of existing Suns as well as linux boxes; there is benefit in having a similar GUI and similar software on each. This reveals the answer to the question of my subjectline, I argue.
We had a SUN demo (Score:4, Informative)
GNOME (Score:2, Insightful)
Such editorials are hard to take serious since they are build up on basicly NO deeper knowledge of
Sun doesn't know how to approach this (Score:3, Insightful)
In future, if Sun really wants something it can call the Sun Java Desktop, it would have all the applications in Java, and a Java runtime which is perfectly integrated into the OS, like OS X's Java environment.
-----------
WAP Apache [chiralsoftware.net] software
SATA (Score:2, Interesting)
I have not tried the JDE, but i wasn't able to get Suse 8.1 and even Suse 9.0 installed as delivered on my machine due to SATA issues. Pretty much same error - installer couldn't find a place where to drop the OS.
My suspicion is that it may be the same issue.
SATA only got seriously addressed at the end of 2.5 kernel tree, as i recall Redhat had its own version of kernel 2.4 that incidentally supported serial ATA, but Suse was behind on this front. Of course, for Sun not to include such support i
I can understand the problems but... (Score:5, Informative)
I have installed JDS 2 on a Emachines 6805 Athlon 64 notebook with almost no trouble. The only issues were ACPI, built in wireless and Video. The video was an ATI Radeon 9600 that was not supported by the version of the XF86 driver in JDS. Simply download the ATI FGL drivers from ATI and install/configure. Worked great. As far as ACPI is concerned your just going to have to disable it. Most mainboard implementations of ACPI are horribly buggy anyways and Linux kernels have not until 2.6.3(read the change logs, almost everything was from Intel and ACPI related) had very good/complete support of it anyways. The built in wireless was something that had windows only drivers and I did not have the time to try the NDIS wrappers tool.
I have people in my office that have JDS2 running with little effort on IBM T40's, Toshiba Tecra M1/S1, Toshiba M100, various desktops including Dell PW650, Tyan K8W based Dual Opterons, HP XW4100 workstations, plus all kinds of misc homebrew machines.
As I believe someone else has pointed out, JDS is not intended to run on the latest hardware, it is designed to run very well on slightly older but much stabler hardware. It is intended to be a corp desktop, easy to deploy from a reference image to tens or thousands of similar machines and then work consistently. How many people need a 3.2Ghz P4 Prescott to run StarCalc? Mozilla? Your certainly not going to game under it.
This really brings up one of my favorite aspects of Linux, its adaptability to different tasks. The Sun JDS "envronment" servers a different purpose than Fedora or Gentoo. It dose several things much better than either of those two do with minimal work on the users part. Sure you can probibily get Gentoo or Fedora to do the same thing that JDS dose but it would take a great deal of work and even more so to make it easily reproduceable.
On a slightly differeny note I do really get tired of all the Sun bashing that goes on. Just as I have grown tired of all the Microsoft bashing the used to go on at the top of Sun. Sun is just a company with a great deal of excellent people working there that generally are working towards a common goal: building better software and hardware that makes peoples lives easier and more enjoyable and have a good time in the process. Sun is not dying. Far from it. They are only becomming stronger.
I must insert this disclaimer: I work for Sun in Solaris OS Engineering. I have for the last 8 monthes and been enjoying every day of it.
Re:I can understand the problems but... (Score:5, Funny)
Oh come on. Being nothing more than a pioneering and innovative open systems company with decades of experience, if Sun refuses to listen to the wise suggestions of thousands of open source zealots, many of whom have at least a year or two of software experience, what can it expect?
The author's bio is worth a look.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Also a professional actor and model, Jem spends much of his time performing in such productions as television commercials, stage plays, and interactive variety shows.
Biography provided by the author, October 2002
from here : http://www.scifan.com/writers/mm/MatzanJem.asp
2.4.19 (Score:2, Funny)
Thats simple. Thats the version of Linux kernel they have licensed from SCO.
Maybe it's me; I don't see the point of JDS. (Score:3, Insightful)
1. There are a bunch of already-existing and very high quality Linux distributions, all of which make a huge number of very useful packages available. So, Sun weighs in with a Beta distribution which includes almost no packages other than their custom Sun stuff?
2. With all the aforementioned very high quality Linux distros out there which are more or less unencumbered by license issues (besides GPL, which we all like), Sun encumbers its new O/S with a seven page license agreement?
3. With all the downloadable distros which can be had for no more than bandwidth costs, Sun goes with a subscription model? And then provides shaky support to boot?
4. With all the other distros offering a league of choices, KDE, Gnome, Blackbox, etc, configurable on a user-by-user basis, Sun forces you into using only one specific window manager across the board?
5. And, sun releases this system without (apparently) adequately testing their installer against popular types of hardware?
Like I said, maybe it's me, but this is kind of a "WTF" moment for me. Why is Sun trying to reinvent the wheel like this? Why are they doing so much to make their distro much weaker than existing ones? What's going on?
I thought their rotating windows trick was kinda cool, but I think I'm going to stick with Slackware and OS/X on my machines. I've got the JDK installed on both, and Eclipse, too. It seems to be working a lot better than their new setup...
Re:Maybe it's me; I don't see the point of JDS. (Score:3, Insightful)
Corporations spend *a lot* of time with internal end user support. So much so, that it is just nutty. I did that type of work when I was in college and it was just ridiculous. You've got users who aren't much above using their CD ROM
Partitioning problem, maybe? (Score:3, Interesting)
You'd think this following statement he made would have been a clue that there was probably something wrong with the way he partitioned the 80 GB drive he claimed should have been able to handle the install:
The guy says the partition configuration he used for the JDS didn't work for SUSE 9.1 either, and had to repartition it to have enough space to complete the install! It appears to me that the only difference between this and the problem he had with JDS was that it sounded like JDS gave the warning a bit earlier in the install.
I believe that a JDS install should alleviate the user as much as possible complications from partitioning. Yet, we don't know if he had used "advanced" options that permitted him to create the limitted partition sizes, or a default install. In fact, we know nothing about the options he was given and the options he chose for partitioning.
No choice (Score:4, Informative)
Because the feature freeze was six months ago. That's how commercial UNIX works, and SUNW are traditionally a commercial UNIX company. If you want to be an über-l33t Linux h4>
Sun installations suck for technical workers (Score:4, Insightful)
I wonder when Sun are going to get their act together and start fixing the basic toolchains available on their environments. We work on Sun slices at work, and we're prevented from having access to all sorts of basic tools we need.
Now I can understand wanting to restrict access to compilers, scripting languages, etc.
But perl *is* available on the environment, yet the halfwits who set policy in our server sections prevent us from having access to tools like less (yes, we have to use more, tail and head forall of our gigabyte-log-scanning needs because the version of vi on these environments won't read long lines or too-long files); vim (sigh) or (perhaps less controversally) lsof.
And the reason?
These are disallowed for 'security reasons'.
This is the second place I've worked at where my team has been limited like this. When are Sun going to get a clue and learn to install the basic tools geeks need to be happy?
Until they do - avoid Sun.
digging their own grave (Score:4, Informative)
That's not the way to get users to pick up your product. SuSE is the only linux distro that's wholly "pay for product" -- and even they have a liveCD and an ftp-installer ISO available. I understand Sun wants to get the product out...but does Sun understand that?
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:This begs the question (Score:5, Informative)
The usefulness of JDS would hinge on how good JES is. So far I haven't found a good review of it, either alone or in comparison with similar stacks from Novell, IBM, Microsoft, etc.
C'mon, OSDN, let's get with the program.
Re:This begs the question (Score:5, Insightful)
A few years ago when Gentoo popped up, a lot of people said "Do we really need another distro? We already have RedHat, and Debian, and SUSE."
Now, a few years later, RedHat has abandoned its consumer line to a group of volunteers (Fedora), Debian is just.. years behind the other distributions in terms of installed software and catching up at a snail's pace (leaving its excellent toolset and great stability a bit frustratingly useless in practice for the main distro), and SUSE has been purchased by Novell (which has turned out to be benevolent, but it might as likely have turned out not to be). Meanwhile Gentoo, while still not yet a general purpose solution, is maturing at a great rate and is currently a far more attractive solution for many people's purposes than any of these.
I'd say then that the answer to "Do we really need another distro?" Is always yes. The more the merrier. Choice and redundancy are good things.
redundancy? (Score:3, Interesting)
I agree with choice, but I agree with gparent, we have enough redudancy. I might agree with you if every problem inherent with linux were properly solved, but they're not. At this point, we have far too much wheel reinvention, and that's not generally a good thing.
Re:My apologies.... (Score:2, Informative)
Don't let Sun's use of Microsoftian branding throw you, big guy.
BTW, You should probably let IBM know that Java is a dead language. I'm sure Big Blue would be interested in hearing about that.
Re:My apologies.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Umm, yea, you're probably right. IBM's never made any mistakes before over their choice of technology. Why should they now?
Re:My apologies.... (Score:2, Insightful)
The rest of your comment is troll-ish. If you want people to use your language, you either do a media blitz (Ada, Java, C#, Borland this and that, etc) or else you wait a long time (5-10 years) for word-of-mouth to spread (C, Perl, Python...). I
Re:My apologies.... (Score:2)
Re:My apologies.... (Score:2)
Re:My apologies.... (Score:2)
Ten plus years ago, I might have agreed with you.
But that was back when developers could count on a stable environment in which to deploy their apps. These days, the biggest fear of most developers is that the bloat of the OS, the constant intra-corporate battles over standards, and conflicts over devices, peripherals and plug-ins that endeavor to hook into everything running, have necessitated the need for developers who want solid apps to code in lower
Re:My apologies.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:My apologies.... (Score:2, Insightful)
I think a more apt comparison than Fortran or Cobol would be to
Re:My apologies.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Modding me down doesn't change the reality that corporate-controlled computer languages that don't really offer anything unique to th
Re:My apologies.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Um.. the fact you are discussing the Java Language in an article about the "Java Desktop" Linux distribution does, in fact, make it off topic. That is, in fact, the definition of "off topic".
Score:-1 is obviously an unfair rating for your Java comment. However I am fucking sick and tired of every single person who formulates their opinion
Re:My apologies.... (Score:2)
http://www.patd.net/~ciggieposeur/writings/i_dont
I agree with you in general. Java has its uses, but its enthusiasts are flat out wrong that it's the best language for any job, or even "most jobs". Comparing Java to COBOL is almost exactly right.
Re:My apologies.... (Score:3, Funny)
I think we picked that up.
but I'm a huge fan for common sense.
I'm also a fan of tennis... just not very good at it myself. I think there is a parallel here.
To imply Linux is dying because doesn't have the market share for residential OSs, is as ridiculous as your logic.
To imply that a language (Java) is dying when it has the largest market share, and is the most in-demand language in the world, is a strange and unusual definition of the term 'dying'.
Java is dead. Sun is gr
Re:This review is a waste of time (Score:4, Funny)
If you read the review carefully, I didn't blast Sun on anything except licensing, support, and the poor decision that led to the old kernel. The included software, the new utilities and the customized UI I thought were great... but useless to me because my hardware isn't supported.
It's not a very flattering review of the product, but at least it is honest. I shouldn't have to go hunting for a computer that will work with the software. The review reflects my experiences which could very well be your experiences too if you have similar systems.
-Jem