[i]Thankfully, no one is working on an Ubuntu clone at Sun. The goal of
the OpenSolaris 200x releases, as I see it, are to create a modern OS
distribution that innovates using OpenSolaris technologies such as
DTrace, ZFS, and more.[/i]

Yes. For the last 2.5 years I was hoping so much that OpenSolaris could come 
flying off. I have a double-boot install, and always preferred the OpenSolaris 
partition. It simply is - IMHO - more polished and more elegant. I have put up 
with a bunch of shortcomings therefore, even invested in RAM (rather cheap, but 
still, Ubuntu runs easily from 1 GB, nevermind). I didn't mind to lose installs 
and having to redo them, finally Nevada is a moving target.  
I put up with sendmail losing mail, despite of most qualified help in here 
(search the archives if in doubt), I have tried my best to connect to my access 
point through wire and WiFi using nwam - and given up despite of a lot of very 
qualified help in here (search the archives if in doubt), I have given up to 
have my single WiFi-dongle coming up as rum0 (this is a minor inconvenience), I 
have given up to expect to mount and copy files to FAT32 reliably and enjoyed 
the most qualified help in here (search the archives if in doubt). I have given 
up on the idea to run ZFS on USB-drives, because in bad circumstances (yanking 
it), the pool might be irreversibly lost as confirmed by the authorities in 
here (search the archives if in doubt). I have known how to work around not 
being able to print properly from Gnome applications to A4, aside from editing 
and modifying the respective ppd file in a specific, not disclosed manner, 
(search the archives if in doubt). I didn't mind booting
  to Failsafe after a certain percentage of power outages just to recover the 
boot archive until I received a personal workaround (search the archives if in 
doubt). 
Again, Nevada is a moving target. Though, what did get on my optimism w.r.t. 
the future of the system that I ran and encouraged others to run, was that many 
of those little bugs - actually the larger part - have not been tackled AFAIK. 
Yes, there was and is plenty of invention going on in OpenSolaris. But based on 
a system riddled with little diseases here and there, and diseases that 
inconvenience the average user, all is not well with stacking more inventions 
on top of sick code. 
Recently, I was informed that I should not run the system on 32 bit, and 
definitively not expect reliability without mirrored drives (search the 
archives if in doubt). I'm already using nvidia chipsets due to their low power 
draw, without any additional cards (6150, 7050), single strips of 2 GB 
(consuming less energy than 2 of 1 GB), single (green) drives. The 2 x 2 GB 
that I need for OpenSolaris already form a thorn in my eyes. If now the elitism 
is great enough to require me to buy 'quality hardware' (search the archives if 
in doubt) and run another disk, sorry, but then I'll take out one of the 2 GB 
RAM strips, abscond the idea of buying and running (and powering) another hard 
drive, and preferably boot to that Efficient Eazel on the other partition. 
Because it does all of those salient points further up; and more importantly, 
without upgrades of RAM and disks. And when I will miss my OpenSolaris, I can 
always start it in VirtualBox.

What does this have to do with Oracle buying SUN? I still, still, have slight 
hopes of Oracle stopping  all the nonsense that we have seen happening in here, 
and building a great Solaris 11 (whatever it will be called by then) on a 
basically sane and Free code base.

Uwe
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