Many companies prototype their projects using available LAMP (Linux/AMP) technology and commodity PCs, says Juan Carlos Soto, Sun's VP of marketing. "It's certainly understandable why that would be the start, but we also want to make sure they have a chance to look at what Sun has to offer," Soto says.
David Young, CEO of on-demand app and infrastructure provider Joyent, knows what Sun has to offer. Joyent's collaboration service runs on top of Sun Fire servers running OpenSolaris. Young wanted a mature OS that runs on multiprocessor systems. "The nice thing about Sun is you get this very focused R&D behind the OS," he says. The latest Solaris releases should show if other developers value that maturity as much as Joyent does.
Solaris Express, Developer Edition aims to simplify installation of the stripped-down operating system. It includes an improved Gnome-based desktop and Sun development tools such as Sun Studio 11 software and NetBeans Integrated Development Environment 5.5, and more than 150 open source apps.
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Solaris Express, Developer Edition OpenSolaris-based distribution for Solaris, Java, and Web 2.0 developers
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Solaris + AMP Open source-based Web infrastructure stack optimized for Solaris 10
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Sun Startup Essentials Expansion of program to help make hardware purchases easier for new companies
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