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	<title>ДАВАЙ-ДАВАЙ &#187; sun solaris linux</title>
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		<title>Sun and Solaris &#8211; where are you headed ?</title>
		<link>http://www.bueche.ch/wp/2007/12/25/sun-and-solaris-where-are-you-headed/?utm_source=rss&amp;utm_medium=rss&amp;utm_campaign=sun-and-solaris-where-are-you-headed</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 25 Dec 2007 14:42:02 +0000</pubDate>
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		<category><![CDATA[sun solaris linux]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I started using Solaris around 1992 (ouch, that&#8217;s 15 years ago&#8230;), using version 2.1, then 2.2, then converting the remaining SPARCstation 1 we had in house from SunOS 4.1 to SVR4 and its magic. Fast-forward to 2006, when we ordered our last hardware from Sun : a pack of four Sun Fire V240 to clusterize [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I started using Solaris around 1992 (ouch, that&#8217;s 15 years ago&#8230;), using version 2.1, then 2.2, then converting the remaining SPARCstation 1 we had in house from SunOS 4.1 to SVR4 and its magic. Fast-forward to 2006, when we ordered our last hardware from Sun : a pack of four Sun Fire V240 to clusterize a mission-critical OSS using Veritas CVS and a Hitachi SAN. During all these years, Solaris was a nice friend to have on my side. The only road bump was the brain-damaged NIS+, which is now gone for good. In short : I should be happy.<br />
<span id="more-17"></span><img src="http://www.bueche.ch/wp/wp-content/uploads/2007/12/solaris_certified_admin.png" alt="solaris_certified_admin.png" align="right" /><br />
But no, I&#8217;m not. Sun has gone through a few strange and acrobatic strategy changes : dismiss Opensource, then provide a CD full of libs and tools (but not compiled for 64 bits so you had to re-do the job yourself), then offer Linux, then signing a partnership with Microsoft (yes, those guys with which they went up to a lengthy and unconvincing legal battle about Java support). And Java Opensourcing ? Why did it take so long ?</p>
<p>Where are you going, boys ? Should I keep my Solaris certified admin badges in a box ? Will they have some meaning in 2010 ? Or drop them in /dev/null right now ?</p>
<p>If a customer ask for replacing a bunch of servers, should I go to your new hardware and Solaris 10 ? Or use Linux ? It has all that stuff that everyone of us expect like MySQL, PostgreSQL, a solid Apache with PHP and a bunch of LDAP libs inside, plus the 1304 perl modules and tools that come with Ubuntu.</p>
<p>Give me a good reason to continue using Solaris. In the projects I work for, the OS is now something as common as power from the facility, water from the tap and food from the shop : it&#8217;s just there to buy and use. Nobody wants to get inside and understand how it works : they buy it, use it, be done with it. The interesting job is one layer above the OS : in the application. Build something cool, sell it away, and run away with the cash. Nobody will care about the underlying OS layer (unless it&#8217;s from Microsoft and goes south every now and then, but that&#8217;s another story).</p>
<p>I have got my way for the desktop in 1997 : I left Windows and started using Linux (and later OS X). Now another road fork is in front of me for the server layer : Solaris or Linux. My customers will most likely follow my recommendations, so please : give me a good reason to recommend Solaris.</p>
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