June 2007
Téléchargement JDK Sun 1.4.2
by pierrenumerique & 2 others (via)Page de téléchargement du JDK 1.4.2 pour les différents système d'exploitation.
Sun CEO spills Apple Leopard secret | InfoWorld | News | 2007-06-06 | By Gregg Keizer, Computerworld
by nhoizeyOn stage Wednesday in Washington D.C., Sun Microsystems Inc. CEO Jonathan Schwartz revealed that his company's open-source ZFS file system will replace Apple's long-used HFS+ in Mac OS X 10.5, a.k.a. "Leopard"
May 2007
jxta.org
by cyberien & 2 others (via)Project JXTA Objectives
* Interoperability - across different peer-to-peer systems and communities
* Platform independence - multiple/diverse languages, systems, and networks
* Ubiquity - every device with a digital heartbeat
Imagine the possibilities!
* Find peers and resources on the network even across firewalls
* Share files with anyone across the network
* Create your own group of peers of devices across different networks
* Communicate securely with peers across public networks
Téléchargement SAN Stroredge 4.4.x
by pierrenumeriquePage de Téléchargement dus SAN FOundation Kit Sun contenant le driver Leadville pour les cartes Qlogic
GullFOSS: Sun Microsystems joins porting effort for OpenOffice.org for Mac
by nhoizeySUN aide le portage d'OpenOffice pour Mac OS X !!!
April 2007
» Apple’s new kick-butt file system | Storage Bits | ZDNet.com
by springnetApple is doing something really cool with storage - not to discount their laudable RAID product - and that something is called ZFS. The bright side of the Leopard slip: more time to integrate ZFS is a Good Thing.
March 2007
Use The Sun For Air Conditioning | Air Conditioning Blog
by johanengleUsing solar energy to trim down this expense is a much wiser decision to make financially as well as ecologically. The less we employ fossil fuels for heating and chilling our environment, the cleaner and healthier the environment will be
Spring Break 2007!
by cflickIt's that time of year again so why not start it off with this video of Spring Break 2007
Sun joins the Free Software Foundation
by pvergainSun Microsystems is the latest company to become a patron of the Free Software Foundation (FSF). The FSF's corporate patron program allows companies to provide financial sponsorship for the FSF in return for free license consulting services. High-profile FSF patron affiliates include prominent technology companies like Google, Nokia, IBM, Cisco, and Intel. FSF involvement represents Sun's latest attempt to take a more active role in the open-source software community.
Over the years, Sun's position on the FSF's GPL license has changed many times. In 2004, when Sun first considered adopting the GPL, Jonathan Schwartz said that the company viewed "the GPL as a friend." A year later, Schwartz expressed a very different opinion when he condemned the GPL and characterized its share-alike clauses as a "predatory obligation" and "intellectual property colonialism."
Sun officially put an end to the flip-flopping last year, when the company finally released its Java programming language under the GPL. Sun representatives have also expressed interest in potentially dual-licensing OpenSolaris to make it available under the GPL as well as the company's own CDDL license. Now that Sun has liberated the source code of its two flagship products, it seems clear that the company is willing to practice what it preaches. Sun's newly-announced support for the FSF tells us that Sun's GPL adoption isn't just another passing phase for the company.
Sun's interest in the GPL3, an upcoming revision of the GPL, probably played a role in the company's decision to become more involved with the FSF. At present, developers of the Linux kernel do not intend to transition to the GPL3. If Sun adopts the GPL3 for OpenSolaris and the Linux kernel remains with current version of the license, it could potentially stimulate the growth of the OpenSolaris community and help Sun attract community contributors who are ideologically aligned with the FSF.