| By Linux News Desk | Article Rating: |
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| June 2, 2004 12:00 AM EDT | Reads: |
28,415 |
Schwartz wouldn't say when it would happen, but he was adamant that Solaris would indeed be open-sourced one way or another.
Anticipating the community's resistance to Sun's reluctance to follow the GPL route for licensing, Schwartz added:
"Look, you only need to look at what we've done with Java to understand how Sun views the value of incorporating community feedback."
The Java community will have its own view on that, but the point was well made.
Eric S. Raymond, in an interview, commented: "If [Sun] don't get this done within six months, it's not going to matter at all because Linux is advancing too fast."
Sun has not yet disclosed what kind of license Solaris would be released under, nor when.
Published June 2, 2004 Reads 28,415
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TJ 06/03/04 02:06:24 PM EDT | |||
Sun is actually doing some great stuff. I am a long-time Unix person, working with all Unix variants, recently Linux, etc.. |
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History 06/02/04 09:58:36 PM EDT | |||
Sun get married with Microsoft. Byebye Sun. |
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Layton 06/02/04 06:53:04 PM EDT | |||
I'll believe it when I see it. Until then, I have to agree with jruschme and some of the other doubters here. This looks to me like a safe bet that it will be called off because of licensing restrictions. Java wouldn't be locked up that way if Sun really wanted to open source it, but then they might have to put up or shut up. On the other hand they do sponsor Open Office, and they just might be reading the same book that IBM has and finally realize that there isn't any big money left in operating systems. On the other hand, if the hardware is free, and the operating system is free, and the application stack is free - what will Sun propose to make it's living with? Java? Or do they think that they will make their money on support services like IBM and Red Hat do? Of course IBM sells or leases hardware because it costs them something to make it, and Red hat doesn't mess with hardware. I don't see this combination working to do anything but put them out of their troubles. |
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RP 06/02/04 01:04:32 PM EDT | |||
I dont want any so called open source if its based on SCO owned UNIX code. Linux is free of all that BS. What is the value in this to anybody, looks like more liability for everyone? If Sun wants news why dont they make Linux run excellently on their highend multi >32cpu Sparc boxes. Or release java as open source, Im starting to see the value in that. |
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jruschme 06/02/04 10:38:50 AM EDT | |||
Okay, help me out here... I thought that Solaris was basically SVr4 Unix with a bunch of Sun extensions (OpenWindows, etc.). If so, then isn't the core OS tied up somewhere in the whole Novell/Caldera/SCO mess? Or am I missing something here? |
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secondsun 06/02/04 10:37:28 AM EDT | |||
This move is just a FUD announcement against Red Hat and Microsoft who are kicking Sun's ass in terms of name recognition, performance, price, availability, compatibility, etc. |
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gspr 06/02/04 10:29:07 AM EDT | |||
Open source but non-free (as in Freedom) software has its problems, even for those of us who love openness. There will always be some idiot developer who has been reading a lot of non-free, open Sun code who decides to contribute something to a GPL'ed project such as Linux - and boom, there you have it - disaster! It's "impossible" for the maintainers of Free software to be 100 % sure that contributed code is not already distributed under a non-Free license. |
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DFJA 06/02/04 10:28:04 AM EDT | |||
I bet you they will make sure that whatever licence they use is GPL-incompatible. That way Solaris code can't be incorporated into Linux. They are in effect trying to splinter the Open Source world - in a way that benefits them, and ultimately, Micro$oft. On the assumption that this is what they do, I wouldn't go near this with a bargepole. They are clearly not motivated by wanting to make Open Source (and in particular GPL) software better, only that they think they can drive a wedge into the Open Source movement for their own gain. |
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anon 06/02/04 10:26:16 AM EDT | |||
Sun's idea of "open source" is sometimes a peculiar one. What license will Solaris be OSed with? |
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jdigital 06/02/04 10:25:28 AM EDT | |||
Solaris has already been open source, depending on your personal definition of 'open'. But I purchased the full source to x86/SPARC off the Sun site 4 years ago - it cost me around $40. They canned that program pretty quick. |
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FreeJava 06/02/04 10:23:01 AM EDT | |||
Open-Source Java next, anyone?? |
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