> The problem I had to deal with was smart phones!
> 
> I run the family website/mail server.  Everything was
> fine when it was just people at home on desktops.
> Laptops weren't big in the family at the time, smart
>  phones came first.
> 
> So I had to get SASL authentication working.  I ended
> up building generic Sendmail with the Blastwave SASL
> libraries, then spending another evening trying to
> figure out how to get Sendmail and libsasl talking
> and authentication working.  I did, so now it's not a
> big deal to add another account.  But it was more
> hassle than Solaris should have put me through...
> 
> Linux wins again on this one.  I love Solaris and
> ZFS, but it's getting harder and harder to use
> Solaris as a "home" server when "yum install xxx"
> already has everything done for you.

I really don't get this.
<RANT>
I would think that it would make sense for Solaris/OpenSolaris to have all the
infrastructure stuff (and I'd regard sendmail or an alternative like postfix as
in that category) in their maximally functional form, to handle all sorts of 
situations.
Not to mention asterisk ready to download, and also WiFi support for acting as
an access point.  I mean really, why are there DC powered Sun servers unless
they're being sold to the phone companies?  So having anything that could be
remotely construed as communications software would only make sense, right?
Be great to be able to get a comms appliance (for a coffee shop or small hotel
to be able to use one box as a customer WiFi AP, router, a firewall, a VPN to 
keep
company business separate from customer traffic, a store web site, a PBX if
appropriate, etc).  With zones or LDOMs it should be no big deal to keep all
those functions isolated on a single box...
</RANT>
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