Sun Releases New Servers, Blades & More 213
desau writes "This Yahoo article gives some tidbits on Sun's new toys that are being released today. Looks like they're aiming their guns at intel based systems with many new blade offerings and several small to midrange servers. The article also points out that they're lowering their prices on other servers." Probably a lot more information will come out from the web view - that starts @ 12:30 PM EST - but I think it'll take more than blade servers to make a difference in the future.Removed the first part of the link - the DoubleClick part was my copying link location, and not checking it - it should be correct now.
New lower prices mean... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:New lower prices mean... (Score:5, Informative)
$30 dollars is expensive! (Score:1, Flamebait)
Hey man, $30 is alot of money for a paperweight!
*ducks*
Re:$30 dollars is expensive! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:$30 dollars is expensive! (Score:3, Insightful)
If a full-blown 64-bit machine is a paperweight, what does that make your 32-bit peecee?
Re:$30 dollars is expensive! (Score:2)
But in the end, it's a joke... laugh
Re:$30 dollars is expensive! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:$30 dollars is expensive! (Score:3, Funny)
'jfb
Dude...Sun Blades are $1500... (Score:1)
Re:Dude...Sun Blades are $1500... (Score:2)
I like the blades, but they're gonna have to come down in price a bit more for me to wanna buy one.
Re:Dude...Sun Blades are $1500... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Dude...Sun Blades are $1500... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Dude...Sun Blades are $1500... (Score:2)
Doubleclick (Score:3, Interesting)
Parent is not "offtopic" (Score:1)
Re:Doubleclick (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Doubleclick (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Doubleclick (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Doubleclick (Score:1)
Shutup and get back to consuming you filthy drone. They don't pay for your ad impressions to hear your opinion. :-/
Re:Doubleclick (Score:2)
Wish I could feed the conspiracy more, but...
Re:Doubleclick (Score:5, Interesting)
Is someone at
Forget it (Score:1, Flamebait)
Unless they can come up with some HUGE reason to not go Intel/Linux the server market is lost to them.
Re:Forget it (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Forget it (Score:3, Insightful)
Also low-end solaris servers are crap anyway, they're built essentially like a PC from dell. Why bother? They have a supposedly better processor but they get spanked by an Athlon XP, let alone itanium or the rapidly upcoming sledgehammer.
Re:Forget it (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Forget it (Score:3, Interesting)
Therein lies the difference. Whereas a company would have to deploy "a shitload" of x86 servers, they would only require a small handful of Sun servers. This also reduces strain on the power feed, backup power systems, etc. and can significantly reduce the TCO. Initial purchase price isn't everything.
Sun equipment is also generally more powerful and scalable than its Intel bretheren, and I for one hope cheap, commodity hardware never replaces proven server-grade hardware. That's a world I'd hate to administer.
Okay, I'll bite (Score:2)
Re:Okay, I'll bite (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Forget it (Score:2)
Sun has a major problem on their hands in the EDA world...and their actions and new product introductions aren't convincing me otherwise.
Re:Forget it (Score:2, Insightful)
Huh?! What are you talking about! Sun is the largest producer of big unix boxes on the planet. Unless you are mom and pop shop, Sun has to be one of your finalists for new servers. Ever here of a little thing called TCO?! Solaris is way cheaper to administrate over a thousand servers than Linux/Winwhatever will ever be. Don't even get me started on managing multiple linux kernels!!
Re:Forget it (Score:3)
Also - When I said Linux I meant OpenBSD. Dunno what came over me.
Re:Your Sig (Score:2)
Don't you mean "mean" or "mode"? With median, in a set of eleven comments, each being modded -1, with the 6th being modded 5, the default score would be 5, even though though the poster would seem to be a troll. With mean, the default score would be the more appropriate 0. With mode, the default score would be -1.
Or maybe I'm wrong. I'm not aware of any other definitions of median, though. If I am wrong, I apologize.
Re:Forget it (Score:3, Insightful)
They're not dead yet. Agreed they've got some work to do, but they've turned bad situations in the past.
Personally, I think they should get seriously into the server appliance business. They bought Cobalt, but they don't seem to want to do anything interesting with the company. Those little boxes were really handy and breeze to administer.
They might well have picked the right time for Linux desktops too. Imagine a shrink-wrapped workgroup including a nice Sun box with Cobalt admin tools and a bunch of easy-to-administer Linux desktops. Great for school labs or company call-centeres.
Re:Forget it (Score:2)
Exactly. Simple little boxes that cost almost nothing in admin overhead. If you want complicated then go for a full-blown server.
It's a niche thing.
Re:Forget it (Score:3, Interesting)
Sun will not sit back and let Linux and Intel eat up their market. I also have a friend of a friend who works for Sun and is beta testing Sun's new intel workstation line. Appearently they are noticing companies like Pixar and boeing switching to dell lintel and wintel boxes. They plan to make both 3d as well as software engineering workstations that both will run Linux. Wait until this summer or next fall for the announcment.
Since their own distro is tuned for their own hardware it will be rock solid and stable. This is something thats traditionally an advantage to Unix over Linux. Corporations will love this as well as users.
Re:Forget it (Score:2)
The statement: "They're screwed anyway."
Why are we screwed? Is investing in a proven platform such a bad idea? Should we all just give up and make Linux the only OS? Would that make everybody here happy? No M$, no xBSD, no MacOS, no OS390 and no Plan9. Who the hell needs any of them when Linux is so obviously superior in every aspect?
The statement: "Unless they can come up with some HUGE reason to not go Intel/Linux the server market is lost to them."
Did you read the article? They have x86/Linux blades announced today. Can you pull your head out of your rectal cavity long enough to read the posted stories BEFORE you hand out your elegant two line quip stating the emminent demise of a billion dollar a year company?
Besides,isn't your two liner a lot like the hype about NT circa early 90's? Unix was dead back then. Look, I love Linux on my machines at home. I still have problems with it on my laptop, but that'll get fixed soon. It's great. It's free. Just remember, you don't always bring cost into the equation. My choice of surgeons has little to do with how much they charge. It's how well they can do the job.
How the Stack Up (Score:5, Funny)
And how many lick does it take to get to the center of a Tootsie-Pop?
The world may never know.
Sorry, couldn't help myself.
Re:How the Stack Up (Score:2)
See, and most people probably thought that was off topic.
Re:How the Stack Up (Score:2)
Three.
Please REMOVE DoubleClick Redirect Link.... (Score:2, Redundant)
You guys always yell at us when we do it, now we yell back
From the article (Score:5, Funny)
Alright, my next game box will be a Sun! Cost effectiveness be damned, it'll make up for it in cool points.
Re:From the article (Score:2, Funny)
Re:From the article (Score:2, Funny)
Re:From the article (Score:3, Funny)
Re:From the article (Score:2)
Re:From the article (Score:5, Informative)
That said, it's one heck of a card; up to 1GB of texture RAM (!!) and it's got great connectivity to the RAM as it plugs into the main system bus on a V880 rather than being limited to PCI bandwidth.
It's a niche item, but it'll do well in visualisation studios; for instance, we have a huge rendering server with real 3D capabilities (i.e. you need the glasses) running on an SGI; this might be able to replace that.
Re:From the article (Score:2)
Re:From the article (Score:2)
single-system-image blades (Score:5, Interesting)
SGI kind of went that direction with their Origin series (2000 and 3000, and now Altix), but they're overbuilt. It costs a fortune to buy an empty system, and a fortune to put processors and slots in it.
Maybe somebody has done this already. I don't really keep up with the whole blade server thing very much. Anybody know?
Re:single-system-image blades (Score:2)
Re:single-system-image blades (Score:2)
Re:single-system-image blades (Score:3, Insightful)
This is a hard problem. As you say, it would be really nice, but what you end up with in practice is having to put high-end parts in low-end models and get killed on cost.
Re:single-system-image blades (Score:2)
Two weeks ago, I saw a private announcement of this technology that they talked about today. (signed the NDA and everything!
1) This heterogenous blade system is INCREDIBLY cool!!! You can have Intel blades, Sparc blades, encryption blades, network caching/acceleration blades, etc. etc. etc. all in one frame. The fact that Sun (late as they are) is the first out of the blocks with this idea is remarkable.
2) I WANT CC-NUMA ON BLADE SERVERS! With all the mysterious hype Sun has given N1 (learning from MS, anyone?), I really hope that this is part of their upcoming plans. One OS instance across "n" computers, where n is a variable. Time will tell, I guess.
Re:single-system-image blades (Score:2)
You know, they announced it about 10 hours ago now, and I still have no fucking idea what it is. Pfeh.
Re:single-system-image blades (Score:2)
N1 is a low-administration, self-managing environment. It's a farm of servers and infrastructure that can dynamically reallocate themselves as needed for different loads, and do so intelligently. If your accounting server is getting hammered at month end, but so is your after-hours game server (hey, it's possible!
DISCLAIMER: Since most of this is extrapolation from what I heard, I can't imagine that anything here violates my NDA, but in the off chance that it does, it's a lucky guess.
Re:single-system-image blades (Score:2)
Are you sure about this? The only HP blades I can find are the proliants, which means Compaq, which means intel. I've also been told repeatedly that while both HP and IBM COULD have had non-x96 blades, they don't yet.
I'd love to see it. And your idea of a generic blade frame is something I've thought about too. What a nice idea that would be, but I don't see it happening.
Re:single-system-image blades -- AKA V1280 (Score:2)
Yes. That's what "single system image" means. But it would be cool if the systems were more scalable and less expensive. The V880 scales from 2 to 8 processors and the V1280 only goes up to 12. That blows in terms of scalability. It seems that there should be a way to make a system scale from 1 to N processors, for some very large value of N, for a lot less money up front and preferably less money per upgrade step.
Single system images are easy, for some very large value of easy, up to 1024 processors; SGI sells 1024-processor machines right off their price list. You can phone them up and order one. Why can't we apply blade server technology, high-speed interconnects, and single-system-image operating systems to make a system with a low entry price that scales economically?
Oh, and speaking of economically, you got ripped off something big. A thousand bucks per desktop? That's terrible. You either overpaid for your server, or you're seriously underusing it.
Re:single-system-image blades -- AKA V1280 (Score:2)
God, dude, I really appreciate your input, but you are so missing the point. Read my original post, okay? I started with the Origin series and said, "Gee, wouldn't it be cool if you had a system that scaled like a blade server but used a single system image like an Origin?"
So like I said, while I appreciate your input, we are now right back where I started from.
Re:single-system-image blades -- AKA V1280 (Score:2)
Single... what? SSI defines scalability. "How far does this system scale?" "Uh. Two processors. But you can cluster them!" "So the answer is two processors, then. That sucks."
Re:single-system-image blades -- AKA V1280 (Score:2)
We have yet to reach that limit. I've personally seen 1,024-processor systems-- well, one system, but there are others out there-- and I've heard that 2,048 is working in the lab. The limit right now has nothing to do with anything intrinsic; it's a cost issue. It's really expensive to get two 1,024-processor systems in the same place at the same time.
That said, please decide what you want.
I already have. I want a scalable blade system.
Re:single-system-image blades -- AKA V1280 (Score:2)
Virtual smirtual. The goal here-- in my little thought-experiment-- is to have scalability and cost effectiveness without unnecessary complexity. Clusters, apart from being unsuited for many tasks, are unnecessarily complex. N1, as I understand it, is basically a glorified cluster with some additional layers of complexity on top to make it seem simpler. (Which strikes me as wrong-headed, but that's just me.)
Thats 714 CPUs in one system image with *near* linear scalability.
Yawn. You can buy an Origin 3000 with 1,024 CPU's with considerably better bandwidth than what you described with nothing more than a phone call. The systems ship preconfigured from SGI's Eagan plant. They're not special orders or anything; they're in the price list, for cryin' out loud.
This has been the case since about 1996. The size of the largest supported system image has increased-- from 64 processors to 128 to 512 and now to 1,024, with 2,048 coming later this year-- and the interconnects have gotten faster over time, but the software and the overall system architecture have remained essentially unchanged for the past seven years.
It's good to see that Sun is finally catching up to where SGI was in the mid-1990's.
This is great news (Score:5, Insightful)
This won't save Sun for one simple reason... Even if they lower their prices to a point where it's really "worth" the extra dollars to buy the Sun label (again, their hardware is far more robust than anything I've seen on the Intel side) customers aren't going to recognize that.
Sure, bigger companies will still recognize the value of buying more robust hardware, but their mid-market business will dry up and Sun will buckle. IBM will step in to fill the high-end server role (with Linux) and in 6 years, Sun will be a distant memory.
Re:This is great news (Score:5, Insightful)
We recently replaced the video cards, mice, and keyboards for 2 E450's, and the video card was an ATI rage 128 card ($295). We spent almost $1,000 outfitting our machines with peripherals. The next step up in video cards was $2,000.
I would say that these exorbidant prices are worth it for Sun HW, but their $3,000 monitors have the life expectancy of a fruit fly. But hey, buy our pricey support agreement and we'll replace it free*! (*Free: n. How much Sun will charge you to replace a $3,000 monitor after they get $20,000 for their support contract.)
There are darn few things which Sun is cost effective for anymore. Running a big DB, etc... But the word is Intel for file and print servers and smaller app servers as well. Choose a Linux box with commodity hardware and you could have that entry level blade for about $1,000. If you are worried about the reliability of commodity hardware, get a back up. You still saved half your money.
Does Sun really think anyone is going to shell out for this hardware to run Apache?? If they can't get their foot in the webserver door, what hope is there for Sun ONE?? (Like there was ever hope, but still....) Starts to make you wonder if Sun even knows what they're trying to accomplish anymore.
My SUN wish list:
1) Better volume management without needing to buy Veritas. This is just another way Sun is too expensive. Having their Volume management on Par with AIX would be a start.
2) Die CDE, Die! (Side note - Noone ever sees the desktop of our Sun boxes, noone cares, why not run a default TWM that consumes as little resources as possible.)
3) Better Package management - Take a lesson from Debian.
4) Better freeware access. Pre-compiled binaries are rareish, and downloading and installing gcc so you can use top (if it compiles) is just silly. Add to this my complaint about package management and you have a serious problem as far as I'm concerned.
5) Stop being Microsofty about naming OS releases. I am tired of explaining to my boss that there were not 6 major upgrades to Solaris between 2.7 and 8. I am tired of explaining that the SunOS 3.5 we run downstairs is much, much older than Solaris 2.6. Bastards!
(Boss, we need to upgrade from 2.6 to 8. - What, how do we know it will work! That's like upgrading WFW 3.11 to Win2000! The world will end! Can't we just upgrade to 3.5?? I hear we have that on one of our servers...)
~Jason
Re:This is great news (Score:3, Interesting)
There are darn few things which Sun is cost effective for anymore. Running a big DB, etc... But the word is Intel for file and print servers and smaller app servers as well. Choose a Linux box with commodity hardware and you could have that entry level blade for about $1,000. If you are worried about the reliability of commodity hardware, get a back up. You still saved half your money.
Exactly right, and this is why I think they are doing themselves serious harm by still pretending like there is profit to be made in their vertical strategy. Linux hasn't hurt Sun that badly in the computer room, but it is eating its lunch in the network room and on the desktop. Who in their right mind would shell out twice or thrice the bucks for a Sun desktop box when they can get functional equivalence or better with a Linux/Intel one?
Seems like I keep beating this horse...Sun is not going to be able to compete any more on the user end unless they join the commoditization parade. Period. They don't want to recognize this but they really need to. The no-alternative days that saw any corporation needing Unix run to one of the big vendors and forking over millions for end-to-end installations are long over. SGI has been down this path already; Sun won't be able to subsidize their desktop hardware with server revenue for much longer.
You also mention another reason I hate Solaris -- the dearth of what have become common tools and features for an OS. Yes, I know that kickback from Veritas is nice, but volume management support is about six months away from becoming a throw-in. Oh yes, it makes perfect business sense to maintain an entire separate toolchain for things like 'ls' and 'grep'. Etc.
And I really wish Sun would stop calling their shitty workstations "Blades", since that term has become accepted to mean something else entirely.
Re:This is great news (Score:2, Informative)
That shrinks your list down to 2 items if the above are new to you. Of course can't really fix the naming thing now, unless they decide to start over with the naming scheme.
Re:This is great news (Score:2)
Yes, Sun has recently been offering a CD with freeware, and I consider this to be like the NT resource kit. It is a marked improvement. But perl winds up in the "wrong" (hard to frikkin' find) place. etc., etc., etc....
Their package system is still stone age. Yes, their patches are the quality you would expect from any big iron vendor, but the package management system is still arcane and tempremental. I manage one Debian system and 40+ Solaris systems, and apt-get never confuses, I don't struggle to remember syntax, and it's easy to find out what is on the system.
Right.... Disliking CDE means I want to rip out the entire XServer. Thanks. I do remove CDE and run most of my boxes on OpenWindows, but it would be nice if they had a streamlined WM for production boxes.
None of the above were new to me, just none of them are solutions I consider acceptible. Not for the big money we pay for the privelage of using Sun. Everbody trashes MSFT for not being able to make a stable OS with billions, why can't we jump on Sun for failing to make a usable OS with billions. I understand all about commercial Unices, but AIX does a much better job of being "Industrial Strength - No Fluff" while Sun hides behind a marketing logo and pretty puce CDE.
The funny thing is that Sun thinks of themselves as a Microsoft competitor... Ummm, not since 1991. MSFT ate their lunch on the desktop, with Windows95 of all things (shame), and is now gloating over their last few remaining soldiers in the server room. What MS doesn't do Linux will.
Case in point: MS releases
So MSFT goes from NT3.51 to
~Hammy
Re:This is great news (Score:3, Insightful)
Sun loves customers like you! Those bloated prices are pure profit on top of an already high-margin product. I have to ask, though, why the heck are you attaching framebuffers, keyboards, and mice to E450s in the first place? Was there really something you needed (crappy, slow) local graphics for, instead of just using X across the network? I mean you already said:
So what gives? Why not just use a serial console when you need to touch the machine directly (rather than over the network)?
-Isaac
Re:This is great news (Score:5, Informative)
2) See last weeks news, Sun has already started shipping GNOME 2.x packages for Solaris 8 & 9.
3) WebStart Wizards + SVR4 packaging is a lot more powerful than most people realise. Please don't confusing the power of the package system with a nice easy download thingy. Remeber also that Sun does real patches not just upgrade everything to the latest bits. Our enterprise level customers need this - minimal change.
4) We ship a full CD worth of stuff including gcc and top already compiled and in SVR4 package form (gets installed into
5) The reason for dropping the "2" from Solaris naming is that there are no plans for a Solaris 3.x line (that would be SunOS 6.x). That one is all down to marketing - I hated it when I first saw it but it actually makes a lot of sense.
Commodity hardware. (Score:3, Insightful)
This is not applicable in many situations. If you have 1TB of data it is going to be a PITA to recover that from tape.
You need mirroring and if possible data replication in a different machine or machines (each one of which has the data mirrored) if possible in different locations.
Backups must be your last resort once all the other preventive measures have failed.
If your data is really important then you owe yourself to do more than rely on slow tapes (starting with good quality systems perhaps, those 2 or 3 thousend bucks that you "saved" may come to bite you later when you face downtime. There are not blanket solutions, sometimes commodity hardware will do, other times you must use other solutions).
I predict IBM will buy Sun, eventually... (Score:2)
From the article... (Score:2, Interesting)
A wider range of chips under Windows? They dropped the Alpha, so the only chips are Pentiums and Itaniums, right? I suppose you could argue that you have a lot more clones of Intel systems, plus options for Xeons, PIIIs, and such, but it's not really anything like the BSD or Linux systems' idea of "wider range of chips."
EDITORS, remove ad.doubleclick link in main story (Score:3, Insightful)
this is unacceptable.
Link in story
http://ad.doubleclick.net/click;h=v2|2f40|0|0|
And I'll even post with karma bonus, even though this is offtopic.
Re:EDITORS, remove ad.doubleclick link in main sto (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:EDITORS, remove ad.doubleclick link in main sto (Score:2)
Re:EDITORS, remove ad.doubleclick link in main sto (Score:3, Informative)
Other cutting edge news (Score:2, Funny)
Wow, they are selling *computers* on the *internet*, I guess that's proof that they are ahead of thier time. I shouldn't poke fun at that, but for me, when I hear that kind of marketing fluf as the first sentence in an article, it leaves a bad taste in my mouth.
Sun equipment... (Score:5, Insightful)
I have worked at places that use Sun equipment. All but one were using them for legacy apps as they phased them out. The other place used them for everything, but went under because they couldn't recoup the investment.
Sun hardware is nice to work on, and you can do a lot to Sun equipment without interupting it. They are a pleasure to work with, but they are not worth the price premium they charge.
Nice x86 boxes which can do most of the things a Sun can do in terms of uninterrupted operation during maintenance can be had for cheaper than Sun equipment. Even in the cases of downtime, a lot of places are finding that failover clusters of x86 boxes are more cost effective and reliable than Sun offerings. Also, planned downtime isn't *that* bad...
Couple this with the rather lackluster performance of their offerings in the face of rapidly developing x86 processors, and you are seeing why Sun is in such financial trouble. In the 90s and earlier, Sun was kicking all kinds of ass and was truly worth it for the businesses that used them. A 10-year old piece of sun equipment still beat a brand new PC in about 95 and 96 (my personal experience), but now, a brand new Sun Workstation is nothing special...
Re:Sun equipment... (Score:5, Interesting)
I really don't think that there servers are that much special either. When I saw the headline, I thought that Sun was going to announce some competative hardware (faster CPUs and higher memory bandwidth), but this was about blade servers (that you can get just about anywhere) and a 12 processor box (how many people need one of these?).
I coadmin a Sun cluster (I think its like the biggest in the northern hemisphere), and admin an Alpha cluster. And although the hardware is excellent in terms of reliability and overall craftmanship, but they are too damn slow. At least for scientific computing. I've done some benchmarks on brand new 280s with the 900MHz processors (retail about 20k), and they perform as well or worse than an 800$ low end Dell (about 8 months old). Take a look at the Itanium2's performance. These guys are awsome. Memory bandwidth out the yazoo! 64bit addressing, nice machines. We're getting 3 of em soon
I loved this line from the article: Sun's been criticized heavily for sticking to its own Sparc processors and Solaris operating system.
Umm, so if they don't do this, then what do they do? Become an integrator or a reseller? One thing I will give Sun, is Solaris is pretty damn nice.
I will give one thing to Sun's boxes/Solaris. They might not be fast, but then again they never really slow down. I've seen Sun boxes that are almost completely out of memory and have a load of like 10 or 20 (maybe higher, don't remember on a 1 cpu box), and they are completely usable! Compared to my dual Alpha's running Linux, if they are paging hard and the load is about 4-6 it can take a couple of minutes just to log into one of em.
All in all I like Suns, but they look like they are setting themselves up to be an orphaned division of some other company.
Re:Sun equipment... (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh, I guess not
The fact of the matter is, once you've hired the right people to do this alternative, then invested in the premium hardware (What? Not buying cheap clones for your companies critical apps?), then arrange for Software and software support
On top of that
Linux is cool, no doubt. Intel platforms are inexpensive, no doubt. Linux programmers, Linux support and intel System engineering all combined together for building, deploying and maintaining mission critical apps is not. So the time you took and the money you spent and the money you are going to spend on support
As for Windows? Pftttt, Windows is a toy. Look how much effort Microsoft is putting into the home entertainment market. They see their future quite clearly.
Re:Sun equipment... (Score:2)
In the
Nonsense. (Score:2)
Re:Sun equipment... (Score:2, Informative)
2> but they are not worth the price premium they charge.
Unless you need #1. In which case #2 is wrong.
3>Nice x86 boxes which can do most of the things a Sun can do in terms of uninterrupted operation
3>during maintenance can be had for cheaper
Unless you need the things they can't do. Then X86 isn't cheaper. Cheaper doesn't count if it can't do the job.
4>Even in the cases of downtime, a lot of places are finding that failover clusters of x86 boxes
4> are more cost effective and reliable
Unless your application doesn't cluster, or is too expensive to cluster. Then X86 isn't cheaper. There are also applications / problems that will only run well on a large box. X86 doesn't do large well, although Opteron should change that in time.
5>Also, planned downtime isn't *that* bad...
A. Unless its $1,000,000/hour down time. Then it is bad.
B. Unless you are trying to get a product to market to beat the compeition. Then it is bad.
C. Unless dozens, hundreds, or thousands rely upon the provided service. Then it is bad.
5>Couple this with the rather lackluster performance of their offerings in the face of rapidly developing x86 processors,
If the application runs there. If X86 can handle the load (oooh, sorry, its a 4.00001Gb process). If X86 benchmarks OK in the application. (Some actually suck compared to others.) If the X86 operating system supports the job type/ size/ requirements. (Benchmarking & prototyping should be your friends. They have to be if you want to avoid expensive "white elephants." I have no Sun white elephants, I do have a big Dell thats now a sort of joke. "Sill no use for it?")
6>and you are seeing why Sun is in such financial trouble.
7>In the 90s and earlier, Sun was kicking all kinds of ass and was truly worth it for the businesses that used them.
In may respects, little has changed. Sun's CPUs weren't the fastest then, they aren't the fastest now. Sun was innovative then (NFS, NIS, etc. etc.), they are innovative now (Java, N1, Sungrid, Solaris N..N+!). Economies go through boom/bust cycles. I expect that the economy will improve, and so will Sun's position.
8>A 10-year old piece of sun equipment still beat a brand new PC in about 95
I remember PC magazine panning the new SparcLX (Classic?) in a Unix shootoff about that time (Maybe a couple of years earlier). Sun was expensive then, they are expensive now. But for some things, its worth every penny.
Some things are only free if your time has no value. A cheap box that can't do the job isn't a good value.
Sun Blades are Awesome (Score:5, Funny)
nothing like twirling the sword around yer head to blind/stun/destroy undead with Sun Rays...
Sheesh, how is this "news that matters"? Any second rate geek worth his 6 siders knows about Sun Blades...
heh (Score:3, Funny)
Of course, no one on THIS site appreciates my sense of humor.
Issue is Channel (Score:2, Interesting)
Question (Score:4, Interesting)
But they continue to shrink in marketshare, and the non-hardware related news items coming from Sun make them look, well, stupid.
Are the engineers and PHBs even talking to each other any more?
Important, actually ... (Score:5, Insightful)
I do not think Sun is going away. They build good
kit. It lasts, its reliable and its not power hungry. Solaris has been around a long time. Its stable, scales extremely well and is well understood. Its is also very network aware. It does cache filesystems for instance.
The N1 idea is a pearl. Admittedly they have a way to go in implementation but you can see the point where they completely virtualise storage and hardware. If you read the docs for the blade stuff (computer on a card with standard connectors) you see that they are already offering automatic drop out & replacement from pool of failed gear. That is really very impressive. And they will do Linux. You try and do this at home
PS
For some reason these forums now seem to attract a huge amount of vacuous posts. No reasoning, just kneejerk "X company are dead cos they dont do linux/wintel".
A very large base of the open source software you all now use was created on Sun gear. If SMCC had not survived 12 years ago I really doubt there would be a Linux. Show some perspective.
Now all they need (Score:2, Funny)
Dude, your're getting a Sun???
The real problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The real problem (Score:2)
Two words: third-party memory. As always, cost vs. risk, but the risk is generally very low as long as you don't get bottom-of-the-barrel RAM.
I think you're missing the point (Score:2)
what this all means... (Score:2)
Won't fix Sun's biggest problem (Score:2, Insightful)
It would be very difficult for Sun to sell competitive boxes when their CPUs are half-speed. How are they going to sell an 8-way box for the same price as a 4-way commodity Xeon 3GHz?
What Sun has to do is: GET THE HELL OUT of making CPUs. It costs them tons of money, and they can't do it well, and the failure is crippling them. Everyone likes Solaris; everyone likes Sun's reliability features; everyone HATES Sparc's performance.
My advice to Sun? PARTNER WITH FUJITSU!! Fujitsu currently makes a Sparc chip that's almost twice the speed of Sun's! Sun should just drop their own CPU development and buy Sparc CPUs from Fujitsu. This would save Sun the $400M they currently spend on CPU development, drastically lowering their prices, and would double their performance. Seems like a no-brainer to me.
Re:Won't fix Sun's biggest problem (Score:3, Informative)
What is true. Sun is not at the bleeding edge of processor development -- a place primarly for scientific computing. They are however at the leading edge, along with many others, and because of that they produce very stable, very productive, very scalable commercial application servers.
Oh, and please do have a visit to Sparc Consortium [sparc.com] and check out the many other who contribute to sparc development.
Sun: Apple 2? (Score:3, Interesting)
Why doesn't Sun pull something like Apple did? Make a high-end workstation, running Solaris with some much, much better UI over top of it - something akin to Aqua.. Could call it Solarix, heh, or Solaris X or something. Possibly dump X11 in favour of a proprietary display engine, similar to Apple/QNX/NeXT/etc, but keep X11 compatibility availble in the system. Start getting stuff like Photoshop and the big 3d apps, Maya, Lightwave, Softimage|XSI, ported over. It'd probably take a serious expenditure of capital to bribe the companies into supporting the OS/architecture.. but it could be done. The SPARC processor would likely stay, of course, but they'd have to get better 3rd-party video hardware support going to really get this to play nicely. DDR memory would be necessary, too, maybe even AGP graphics. Almost a complete reworking of existing SPARC motherboards, I'd think.
Then you get high-end SPARC servers, and midrange, class workstations equivalent to Apple's best, and, if they design the OS properly, usable by new users as easily as OS X is now.
Pipe dream, maybe. Could be worthwhile for Sun to look in to this sort of thing.
What do you guys think?
Re:Linux? (Score:5, Insightful)
When linux does all the things Solaris can do. Don't hold your breath.
- A.P.
Re:Linux? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Linux? (Score:3, Informative)
That's cool, because I have no plans to do that to the Solaris machines I run. It hasn't been "hip" to call Solaris slow since 2.5.1, perhaps 2.6 -- about 4 years ago.
with no multimedia support
This is important on a server...
and 80MB Java footprints from a "Hello World" program
Yes, Java on Solaris sucks. The official Java distribution for Linux is also from Sun -- so go figure, it sucks on Linux too.
so I guess you're right that Linux will never do all the things Solaris does.
Guess I am.
- A.P.
Re:Linux? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: relicensing? (Score:3, Interesting)
They have a whole section of the Solaris licensing pages dedicated to relicensing. Don't laugh. For some models, Solaris 9 relicensing fees are in the US$100,000's. Not sure if this link will work because the have some strange session-management junk on the pages with the pricing on them: store.sun.com/catalog [sun.com]