Hi Rodney, I wouldn't bet that Solaris survives, at least not on x86, where everything turns into Linux now. The reduce also the available boxes every year. At the end there will be maybe Java and some "specialized" machines like Exa* or even something new as the wind of SAP Hana blows stronger every day.
just some thoughts ... thomas -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] Im Auftrag von Rodney Sparapani Gesendet: Mittwoch, 17. Juli 2013 15:32 An: [email protected]; SunRay-Users mailing list Betreff: Re: [SunRay-Users] Goodby Sun Ray ... On 07/17/2013 07:41 AM, Jim Klimov wrote: snip, snip, snip ... > Even if Oracle's reasons were monetary, I don't think they dumped this > direction because it was not profitable - it might have been just not > ridiculously lucrative, and the big corporation does not meddle with > small sales. After all, some of this list's members, I understand, > have thin client businesses? Do they at least sustain themselves? ;) > > //Jim Hi Jim et al. The whole thing is mystifying to me. Why pay billions for Sun if you aren't going to move forward with their tech? As far as I can see, the only thing that survives is Java, Solaris and SPARC. But, Oracle could have kept their foot in those for nothing without buying Sun!?! Certainly, IBM, or whomever, would have kept those going. It just doesn't make sense ;o( -- Rodney Sparapani, PhD Center for Patient Care and Outcomes Research Sr. Biostatistician http://www.mcw.edu/pcor 4 wheels good, 2 wheels better! Medical College of Wisconsin (MCW) WWLD?: What Would Lombardi Do? Milwaukee, WI, USA _______________________________________________ SunRay-Users mailing list [email protected] http://www.filibeto.org/mailman/listinfo/sunray-users _________________ Diese Nachricht wurde vom OeNB Mailserver TLS verschluesselt empfangen _______________________________________________ SunRay-Users mailing list [email protected] http://www.filibeto.org/mailman/listinfo/sunray-users
