What will happen to solaris




















Chris is given a second chance with his wife, but this is overshadowed by questions about whether this creature really is his former wife. In the end, he decides to not go back to earth, is transformed by Solaris into a cloned creature, and lives a life of blissful illusion with the Rheya-creature. The original novel by Stanislaw Lem, upon which the two movies was based, contained a lot of philosophical dialogue. The Russian film retains this flavor.

The original screen play to the English film, and its initial shooting, also contains philosophical dialogue. We're proud of ourselves, in a way. But our enthusiasm is a sham. We don't want to conquer the cosmos — we want to extend the boundaries of Earth to the cosmos.

We are only seeking Man. We don't want Other Worlds. We want mirrors. Maybe we don't need to know what it is, or why. For those of us who were there, we will remember our comrades and our victories and try to forget the politics and stupidity that killed the best company in the Valley. There are a lot of dedicated hard-core Windows hobbyists out there ….

I was pleased when Sun open-sourced Solaris. When I think what could have been? BSDs were arguing in the 90s. OpenSolaris was just too late in What could have been eh? All in all, Solaris did last for a while and it was nice to see it opensourced before disappearing. And, in all candor, I wish I had found a way to do more, back when it might have counted.

Solaris was, in my opinion, the finest piece of software engineering the world has ever seen. In at least in my mind that distinction changed to illumos. I actually think this development is probably a good thing. Even as the on again, off again maintainer of a linux distro for the past 13 years I still when I had a choice predominately deployed Solaris for all workloads that mattered. As the mindshare dropped after Oracle took over and support for open solaris in opensource projects fell, to the point of quite a few even rejecting patches the effort of porting across required software increased.

But the rewards at the end in terms of system reliability and application uptimes mostly outweighed this cost. Sun made so many mistakes… Canceling Sun PS in , briefly canceling Solaris on x86 in , not making a deal with Google in , the MySQL acquisition, and so many other poor, poor decisions. Yet Sun had the best engineering culture, one that allowed Sun to produce revolutionary technologies — most as yet unmatched in over 15 years since! Working at Sun was a dream come true.

Working in a sea of brilliant people was very fun indeed, and an invaluable education. Scott, thanks for creating the culture! As the last Senior Product Line Manager of Solaris my position was eliminated exactly 10 years ago, at least that is what they told me then I still feel sad for all the people who kept the faith and decided to stick around and concerned about how Oracle has dealt and will not deal with the installed base.

The writing was on the wall years ago when I made the mistake of checking my voicemail while on vacation and having to deal with a firedrill in operations because a junior director of support services wanted to call a stop ship of the new release stopships are for major defects because he did not want to have his department pay to have media kits shipped to customers with a support contract.

The a.. I ca understand the emotion and disappointment of the end of the road for something like Solaris. However I have to take exception to some of the statements about Oracle here Disclaimer I work there.. Winter has posted here. Performance and feature wise, these systems beat anything else Oracle has to offer. Logic dictates that it must be based on other factors that I do will not speculate on in public, and the same goes for my views on the methods used to implement the RIF.

In my view it has to be a decision based on the KISS principle: How can Oracle do this as cheaply and as fast as possible vs. Who can blame them?

Their primary motivation is profit and return on share holder value. Such is our market driven, corporate run society these days, like it or not. It may be Oracle shortly make an announcement about open sourcing the Solaris code, but for now [ As I sat here reading this having been an Operating Systems Ambassador at Sun for many many years all I can think of is….

Thanks to the engineering and support teams, it was a pleasure working with you guys and wherever the future is going to take us, those days and nights will always be a fond memory. The lawnmower, hitting a rock, decided to back over it and hit it again, shattering bits of iron blade in every direction.

Views on software from Bryan Cantrill's deck chair. Home About. The Observation Deck. The sudden death and eternal life of Solaris As had been rumored for a while, Oracle effectively killed Solaris on Friday.

During these trying times I am reminded of the words of a fine poet: Pay my respects to grace and virtue. Thank you to all who have worked on Solaris.

You have made me a better person. Your friend in computing, Timmy. Written by Jonathan Schwartz on September 4, at pm Permalink. Written by Oracle soll Solaris- und Sparc-Experten entlassen haben - silicon. Written by Bill Rushmore on September 5, at am Permalink. Written by Geoffrey Gardella on September 7, at pm Permalink.

Written by Woo on September 5, at am Permalink. Written by Gabriele Bulfon on September 5, at am Permalink. Written by bmc on September 5, at am Permalink. Written by dhelios on September 5, at pm Permalink. Written by Annatar on September 5, at pm Permalink. Written by Nico Williams on September 7, at am Permalink. Written by Annatar on September 5, at am Permalink. Written by Bob on September 5, at am Permalink.

Certainly new feature development is toast. Thanks for this post, and this work. Written by Dave Emberson on September 5, at pm Permalink.

Written by Oracle : le hardware perdrait quelque 2 emplois on September 5, at pm Permalink. Knowledge is truthful only if it's based in morality. Kelvin: Moral or immoral, it's man who makes science. Think of Hiroshima. You aren't sure yourself that what you saw wasn't a hallucination. As Burton storms off indignantly, he passes Kelvin's father an old friend who is, nonetheless, by no means inclined toward unthinking acceptance of Burton's weird reports and their unsettling implications and mutters under his breath, "He's a bookkeeper, not a scientist!

Father: Why did you hurt him? It's dangerous to send people like you into space. Up there everything's too fragile. Earth has adapted itself to your kind, though at a heavy price. And, indeed, the loss of contact with fundamental sounds and themes breakdowns in relations within and without and the prospects for healing the resultant breach form the abiding lynchpins of Tarkovsky's work.

His slow-moving, graceful, and evocative images gather again and again around "character shifted off axis," becoming, at last, a testament to "the logic of poetry," "organic links," and the possibility of vision made whole. Art could be said to be a symbol of the universe, being linked with that absolute spiritual truth which is hidden from us in our positivistic, pragmatic [concerns].

Art, if you will, as a kind of "hieroglyph" of awareness and consciousness, an esoteric lexicon of divinity and soul. Water, for Tarkovsky, as for Monet and Lao-tzu, is the fundamental image of movement and nature: our terrestrial sojourn within time. Once on the station, Kelvin is stunned to learn that his friend Gibarian has taken his own life.

Affixed hurriedly to the door to Gibarian's space station room is a single sheet of paper with a childlike drawing of a human being—a stick figure, arms outstretched, cruciform like Beckett's lobster. The caption scribbled beneath it reads simply: "A MAN. Let us listen alongside the psychologist Kelvin:. Gibarian: Here it can happen to anyone. If is happens to you just know that it's not madness, that's the main thing. I am my own judge. You should know it isn't insanity.

It has something something to do with conscience. Here in outer space, psychologists and cosmonauts encounter nothing so strange as the vast inner stretches of the mind itself, space becoming the backdrop out of which the ineffable self and moral sensibility now emerge in sharper relief.

Know that it's not madness, that's the main thing. It isn't insanity. It has something to do with conscience and consciousness. His work was clever and detailed and sometimes almost brilliant, and she had many times to agree with him, but the more profound he was the more profound was the silence which enveloped her. She could never get beyond the austerity of his manner or the icy logic of what he had proven, to tell him that his scalpels were intrusions into her mind just as long-ago doctors had intruded into her body, and that, furthermore, his proofs were utterly and singularly irrelevant.

At the end she marshaled all of her strength, and with as good a clarity as she could give him, she said, "Please, Doctor, my difference is not my sickness. A psychiatrist has been trained to believe that, if he were to think that he thought and felt much the same as those people he diagnoses as psychotic, this would not mean that they would not be psychotic, it would mean that he was psychotic Kelvin's journey to Solaris and the further reaches of outer space becomes, not unlike Kristina's, a journey inward in the end, an odyssey to the inmost places of conscience and consciousness.

The "visitor" Hari, Chris's former wife, who comes to him from out of the blackness of deep space, is the archetypal feminine—symbol, perhaps, for the preferred metaphorical means of glimpsing into Infinity, Self, and Void. She reminds Chris of his failings in love, pressing him now to revisit a relationship that had ended in tragedy and also that with the mother original embodiment of the form who had once been both beautiful and distant.

So much for the mysteries of outer space which are, in the end, no more alien or strange than those of the terrestrial plane and the infinite spaces, visages, and voices within.



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