Sun makes Solaris free for non-commercial use

Sun Microsystems this week began to give away its Solaris operating system,a UNIX derivative that runs on Sun Sparc and Intel x86 hardware. The OSis available free of charge to anyone that agrees to use it fornon-commercial use. Typically, Sun

Paul Thurrott

August 11, 1998

1 Min Read
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Sun Microsystems this week began to give away its Solaris operating system,a UNIX derivative that runs on Sun Sparc and Intel x86 hardware. The OSis available free of charge to anyone that agrees to use it fornon-commercial use. Typically, Sun charges $300 to $700 for Solaris. Thefree CD, which is available for the price of shipping and media (about $20)was originally offered to students and instructors but Sun decided to openit up to anyone.

"Lots of really interesting applications are developed in universities," said Brian Croll, director of server software products at Sun. "We don't want price to become a barrier to anyone who might want to play around withSolaris and maybe come up with some innovative development ideas."

Croll did, however, deny rumors that Sun was contemplating taking Solarisdown the free source code route pioneered by Linux.

"We won't be giving source code away. There's a lot of intellectual property issues involved with that which we don't have much control over,"he said. "We wouldn't want to infringe on the Linux space. We want to see Linux grow."

To order Solaris on CD, you must order it online: The company isn't accepting phone orders. This requires you to join the free Sun Developer Connection program. For details on this program and the free Solaris promotional offer, please visit the Sun Developer Web site

About the Author(s)

Paul Thurrott

Paul Thurrott is senior technical analyst for Windows IT Pro. He writes the SuperSite for Windows, a weekly editorial for Windows IT Pro UPDATE, and a daily Windows news and information newsletter called WinInfo Daily UPDATE.

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