Solaris 9 For Dummies 328
Solaris 9 For Dummies | |
author | Dave Taylor |
pages | 354 |
publisher | Wiley Publishing |
rating | 8 |
reviewer | Kevin Spencer |
ISBN | 0764539698 |
summary | A" ...For Dummies" book like Solaris 9 For Dummies will never make you popular with other geeks. However, if you are a Solaris admin, perhaps giving this book to your users might stop them from asking you the same questions over and over. |
I'm pretty intimate with the ...For Dummies book formula. I worked at the company a few years ago. The ownership of the book series has changed a bit, as has its cover art, but the basic setup remains.
Solaris 9 For Dummies is, as with many ...For Dummies books, a starter guide and reference. This isn't a book for administrators, and says so.
Solaris 9 For Dummies maintains the book series' reputation as strong general references for users who are thrust (sometimes unwillingly) into new or different technology and need the basics in getting around, fast.
Author Dave Taylor is no stranger to UNIX, having written several notable UNIX beginner, intermediate and advanced references on UNIX in general, including books on Red Hat Linux, Solaris, and Mac OS X.
Solaris 9 For Dummies works for SPARC hardware as well as Intel-based hardware. More about Dave Taylor's work can be found at his web site, Intuitive.com.
The ...For Dummies series books are pure references. They aren't meant to be read from cover to cover, which gives the author an advantage by writing topics and chapters without a lot of preamble. The information is just shallow enough to understand but never trivial, giving readers typically only what they require. The typical cross-references and tips are available to guide you along. Chapters delve into topics you expect from discussing a UNIX such as Solaris, such as moving about the new GNOME interface (which will replace the old CDE interface over time), running the basic applications and utilities, and the like. In the traditional format of these books, Solaris 9 For Dummies comes with a tear-out cheat sheet. This cheat sheet gives readers a basic CDE and GNOME interface menu command tree to make it easily to find, say, the Empty Trash command.
The book's topics include details on:
- File management
- Making a decent password
- Shells
- Text editors
- Using Writer and StarOffice
- Internet, Web, and Mail access
- Essential system administration
Solaris 9 For Dummies will not make your whites brighter, increase your personal intimate pleasure, or bring peace to the Middle East, and it's certainly not flashy. It's just a good book for the Solaris newbies, plain and simple. If you hack your kernel just for pleasure (gotta shave your palms regularly, I'm sure), you can be reasonably guaranteed this isn't the book for you. However, if you are an Solaris administrator and get plagued with user questions about basic tasks, maybe you should have your boss buy a few copies of Solaris 9 For Dummies for your users so you can continue your Quake3 fragfest uninterrupted.
You can purchase Solaris 9 For Dummies from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Oximoron (Score:3, Funny)
Better Question (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oximoron (Score:5, Funny)
First intro book to Solaris (Score:3, Interesting)
UNIX in a Nutshell (Score:2, Informative)
SCO for dummies (Score:5, Funny)
Re:SCO for dummies (Score:2)
> Sez who?
IHBT, but sez anyone who has a fucking brain (and uses it).
The burning question... (Score:5, Interesting)
We have some Solaris users where I work, but all they do is run their applications. They're not power users, and they don't want to be power users. I guess I'm just having a hard time understanding the intended audience for this book.
Re:The burning question... (Score:2)
Additionally, the office where I work still runs with Solaris 5.8 and they see no reason to upgrade (I don't know enough about the benefits of upgrading Solaris). One of the reasons they cited was cost, so they're staying with 5.8 for the time being.
At this point, a Solaris 9 book would cater only to those few that actually upgraded to that version (Few? Maybe there's many but I'm just guessing), and it's likely that they are power users/administrators and not some "dummy".
-Cyc
Re:The burning question... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The burning question... (Score:2)
Well, when I was a Solaris admin, it was my first serious UNIX work (work as in job, not as in "playing with Linux") and I had to upgrade from 2.6 to 8 and I had almost no troubles at all -- it's easy as pie. Assuming you know what all the software does, where to download it, how to reinstall it, and how to reconfigure every damn conf file that no longer works because of version incompatibility. But really, most of it was smooth excep
Re:The burning question... (Score:2)
...which is great, as long as your customers don't mind running a "Vintage Stage II" operating system, that no longer receives patch support from Sun!
Re:The burning question... (Score:3, Insightful)
A good example, might be a developer at a software company that makes enterprise software, but only runs on Windows so far. The company might want to try porti
Re:The burning question... (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm a perfect audience for this book. I installed our linux servers here, and am in charge of having a plan in case of the worst possible scenario -- SCO forces "the man" to have me remove gnu/linux from our company
All of our services claim they will run on Solaris for x86, which is free on 1 processor machines... So, my exit strategy involves migrating to Solaris.
So, I think this would be a good book to tell me what are the glaring differences. It won't be the best, or last book I'd buy, but it would probably be the first.
Re:The burning question... (Score:2)
I totally agree, and would never change my machines at home. But the business needed a contingency, so I had to oblige. *BSD might be a better choice, but the management really liked the name Sun better than open source. sigh.
Re:The burning question... (Score:2)
This would be the market for such a book.
KFG
Re:The burning question... (Score:2)
1) Write the book
2) Publish it
3) Profit!
The joke is in the name.
Re:The burning question... (Score:2)
Does anyone know much about Solaris 9? Years ago when I wanted to take my work home with me, I picked up the free Solaris 7 release for Intel that SUN mailed out. It couldn't handle my hardware then. Does 9 e
Re:The burning question... (Score:2)
Solaris 9 (Score:2, Troll)
Re:Solaris 9 (Score:4, Informative)
Many people don't like Solaris because of it not being free, and they don't understand it. Remember, it is probably the most developed *nix. It is far more stable than Linux.
The reason they switched to GNOME is because they wanted to have a common look and feel to the *nix family, and now that they are using it, will probably help develop it to a point where it is as easy to configure as some of the other ones.
I agree with you about M$ windows being good w/ app availability, but you have to consider its purpose, hard-core data processing, and the web. I personally run winXP pro (striped down) and Mandrake 9. I have played w/ Solaris quite a bit, and when I get money, will get a Blade 150 [sun.com] or Blade 2k [sun.com].
Re:Solaris 9 (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Solaris 9 (Score:2)
Re:Solaris 9 (Score:2)
I'm a Sun fan, but I am also skeptical of your claim. For very small and CPU-intensive applications, the Dell boxes might win. Any program that taxes I/O should probably do better on the Suns, however (just keep slapping in more PCI SCSI or network controllers into the Suns). Any highly-parallelizable program would probably do better on Suns in SMP mode (if you can afford 106
Re:Solaris 9 (Score:2)
Re:Solaris 9 (Score:2)
Then let them race.
Nathan
Re:Solaris 9 (Score:2)
Re:Solaris 9 (Score:2)
Re:Solaris 9 (Score:2)
Re:Solaris 9 (Score:2)
Rethink the title (Score:3, Insightful)
Win95
Losing weight
Yoga
etc...
But releasing books under that title will *not* attract the type of people this book is aimed at. (As mentioned in the summary, how many of you read "Dummies" books) They are working purely on brand recognition, but in this case, I think that's a bad idea. How about "Beginner's Guide to Solaris" instead?
Re:Rethink the title (Score:2)
Re:Rethink the title (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Rethink the title (Score:2)
z/OS for Dummies
Plan9 for Dummies
CP/M for Dummies
ASM for Dummies
Distributed Computing for Dummies
Nuclear Engineering for Dummies
and the other extreme:
Hello World for Advanced Kernel Hackers
Re:Rethink the title (Score:2)
Everyone is a "Dummy" (in a light, humorously self-deprecating sense of the term) in some field or other. People who recognize that are often more successful than people who can't admit their own limitations. Few things are as irritating as "male answer syndrome," as they describe it on Car Talk.
I think the "... for Dummies" book series success speaks for itself.
Re:Rethink the title (Score:2)
Exactly. And can you describe the details of that typical scenario? I'm pretty sure it's not "Jane Doe wants to do some work on her husband's computer, but he's running Solaris 9. So she buys a Dummies book to learn her way around." More than likely, this takes place in a corporate environment, where some users are thrust into Solaris. If so, why not change the title of the book to something a little l
Re:Rethink the title (Score:2)
Software localizers. Graphical artists. Technical writers/documenters. Editors and layout specialists. Architects working in large firms. Chemical engineers.
There are sooooooo many more job titles in the world than "programmer" and "manager," despite the incredible, mind-boggling myopia you see on Slashdot. All these people probably know a couple applications with incredible fluency, but may well not know how to get aro
Re:Rethink the title (Score:2)
Re:Rethink the title (Score:2)
Re:Rethink the title (Score:2)
I think you're too hard on the Dummies series. Remember that you shall not judge a book by it's cover (a cheap pun, I know, but it was intended). Maybe the title will, as you say, alienate some potential readers, but my personal experience with the book series is
Re:Rethink the title (Score:4, Insightful)
It's "okay" for those titles because the target audience can feel comfortable reading a "Dummies" book. My mother would have no objections to reading/buying a "Windows98 for Dummies" book. On the other hand, your typical techno-wannabe has a very fragile ego and would generally not be secure enough to even be seen flipping through one at the bookstore. It's a classic scenario, typically seen in gender issues (asking for directions, watching "chick flicks," etc.)
Asshole? Probably.
Elitist? No.
Re:Rethink the title (Score:3, Informative)
I'm a professional programmer and have been for 6-7 years, but I think the "* For Dummies" guides are pretty good for what they are. I'm not embarassed to read them. In fact, they suit my learning style really well... I like to b
Re:Rethink the title (Score:3, Funny)
No kidding! I'll be getting my copy from Amazon.com thankyouverymuch.
Re:Rethink the title (Score:2)
While I agree that many "techno-weenies" wouldn't want to go pick this book up and be seen with it on their shelves, I work in a heavy (3000+ server) So
Just how big is the market for this book? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Just how big is the market for this book? (Score:2)
Scary sitting on a shelf (Score:5, Funny)
I've got to say, if I walk into a server room and see a 'For Dummies' book sitting on a shelf, I'll be scared.
Very scared.
Re:Scary sitting on a shelf (Score:4, Interesting)
It's there because I wrote it.
Re:Scary sitting on a shelf (Score:2)
Re:Scary sitting on a shelf (Score:2)
Re:Scary sitting on a shelf (Score:2)
A few days later she made the decision that we would "standardize" on Windows. All other platforms would be eliminated.
The book stayed on her desk for several weeks until I moved on to another job. If the company hadn't been bought there would probably be a "Windows XP for Dummies" on her desk rig
Re:Scary sitting on a shelf (Score:2)
I don't have enough time to fully understand the details of database programming, so you aren't going to find books and books on the topic on my shelf. But, if I'm running an SQL server for the database guys, wouldn't it make you happy to see "SQL for Dummies" on my bookshelf? It's a quick, basic introduction. You have to start somewhere.
Even if you don't plan
UNIX for Dummies (Score:2, Insightful)
Look at the basic topics: File management; Making a decent password; Shells; Text editors; Using Writer and StarOffice; Internet, Web, and Mail access; and Essential system administration. Are any of these *really* solaris specific or different for any other *nix?
I wouldnt exactly..... (Score:2)
It's just like Linux (structure and ideas) but using a bit different commands and flags.
Really, I'd prefer a books like that which has more meat (command list, common flags) along with SUN only stuff. How to use a GUI or text editor is about the same on all platforms.
Re:I wouldnt exactly..... (Score:2)
for Dummies (Score:3, Insightful)
Jason
ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
Re:for Dummies (Score:2)
One of my theories is that it appeals to non geeks, because they often feel stupid when dealing with computers, and I'm fairly sure the "for Dummies" series began with computer topics.
It was a bit hard to get used to buying
Way back
Re:for Dummies (Score:2)
I love these titles! (Score:2, Funny)
1. Retired Racing Greyhounds For Dummies
2. Beekeeping For Dummies
3. U.S. Citizenship For Dummies
4. AOL For Dummies
5. Business Plans For Dummies
Re:I love these titles! (Score:2)
I cannot fathom them making this into a book. Beekeeping sounds somewhat legitimate, the US citizenship I can see. AOL for Dummies, seems a bit redundant. Business Plans for Dummies is pretty scary, but I can believe it.
Re:I love these titles! (Score:2)
2. Beekeeping For Dummies [amazon.com]
3. U.S. Citizenship For Dummies [amazon.com]
4. AOL For Dummies [amazon.com]
5. Business Plans For Dummies [amazon.com]
So, 6. None of the above
--
We have a winner! (Score:2)
Slang? (Score:2)
Shave your palms on a regular basis?!?!?
(The whole maturbation/growing hair on your palms just an urban myth, but I still don't get the slang.)
Re:Slang? (Score:2)
Other titles to boggle the mind (Score:5, Funny)
two things you might not expect in one volume: the "For Dummies" label and Sun Solaris.
Actually, book titles I thought I'd never see:
Dummies are Good. (Score:4, Insightful)
Think about this sentance before you start flaming the dummies books. The author caught the main point right there. I would never buy this book for myself but it sounds like a great thing to buy for other users at my company. I am a UNIX sysadmin, but we don't have any Solaris boxen. If we ever did get one, I feel confident that some man pages, the dead tree manual and some message boards would be enough for me to hack my way through the Solaris caveats, but I would rather eat rocks then set up a training session when I would have to teach middle management how to use the system. If I was forced to do just that, I would probably have them each get a copy of this book as the take home material.
Don't discount the Dummies books, they are a good thing (tm), if not for everyone.
Simple Summary.. (Score:2)
Solaris For Dummies.. one line summary.. drum roll please..
"Don't use it"
Thank you.. thank you.. I'll be here all week. Please make sure you tip the waitstaff on your way out.
end sarcasm...
Quake? (Score:2)
However, if you are an Solaris administrator and get plagued with user questions about basic tasks, maybe you should have your boss buy a few copies of Solaris 9 For Dummies for your users so you can continue your Quake3 fragfest uninterrupted.
I didn't know Quake 3 ran on Solaris!
Re:Quake? (Score:2)
free solaris 9 book (Score:2, Informative)
probably just as good
Dummies books quite good (Score:4, Informative)
I have actually learned recently that the for Dummies books seem to be quite good. The Personal Finance for Dummies book I bought is one of the most highly recommended books on the subject. Dummies books are apparently published by the people who do Cliff's Notes, and I always found those handy, too. (Of course, I was one of those weirdos who read the book and then read the Cliff's Notes...)
I haven't used many of the computer-related Dummies books (the C one I looked at years ago looked awful, but I'm sure it's been through six revisions by now) but for other subjects I know little about but need a good introduction, they seem very good. I'm planning on getting Automotive Repair for Dummies (or whatever they call it) sometime soon.
Some of the Idiot's guides also seem to be pretty good, but more of them seem to be misses.
Speaking of "dummies" and "solaris" (Score:3, Informative)
Off topic/getting carried away (Score:2)
For instance, I have seen:
WWII for Dummies (isn't that what grade school is for?)
Yoga for Dummies (hmmm...Paging Doctor Kildare!)
The Idiots Guide to Sex (perhaps populat on
and my favorite one:
The Idiots Guide to the Mafia (as if you'd have to be anything else to be in the Mob)
C++ for Dummies (Score:5, Informative)
Can't have it both ways (Score:2)
Next From Wiley Publishing (Score:5, Funny)
Sun officially on endangered species list (Score:2, Troll)
This company is in big trouble and trash-talking Scott McNealy's act is getting very old. Some advice:
1. Fire McNealy. Sun can never go forward while this dinosaur of the software wars is in the chair. Thanks for the memories Scott, but Sun lost the war.
2. Get out of the hardware business. Sun hardware is not coming back. Ever. Se
For people who dont like the title (Score:2)
They manage to make
For the person sitting down to a command prompt for the first time, a Dummies book can really get you going, and let you know the basics of how to get more information with man page examples.
Now I was at a company who hired a contractor to do some work, and he showed up with a new dummies book and spent a day going through the book. Now THAT pissed me off, but th
Hey UNIX for Dummies (Score:2)
hmmm, maybe that isn't the ringing endorsement I thought it would be.
rating: 8...problems with 1-10 scales (Score:3, Interesting)
The reason is, individuals have their own ideas of where their 1-10 scales are centered. There are some people who center truly center the scales at 5, meaning that an 8 is a relatively good score. Some center them much higher, like in the 7 range, meaning that they give high numbers to absolutely everything. For myself, I center my scale relatively lowly...meaning that I never given a 10 for anything, a 9 is damn hard to come by, and a 5 is a relatively good score coming from me (I've described 3 as "ok" which pretty much makes 3 the center of my 1-10 scale.) This of course would imply that the spacing along a scale not on 5 is not geometric...but may be logarithmic.
It's a random thought off the top of my head...but I guess I'm saying that I dont think that 1-10 scales are really a good way of expressing opinion without knowing how that individual uses that scale.
Re:Amazon has it almost 15% cheaper (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Slashdot For Dummies (Score:3, Funny)
No, it's expected
Re:Slashdot For Dummies (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Well of course (Score:5, Funny)
List of other titles we're gonna see soon, and who's going to buy them
What, no Linux digs? (Score:3, Funny)
"strcat() for Dummies" - Linux developers
"POSIX for Dummies" - LSB architects
"Making Money for Dummies" - Any Linux co.
Don't hate me for my cynicism!
Re:What, no Linux digs? (Score:2)
How about - "free() for dummies". I page, 1 line:
#define FREE(x) if(x!=NULL) free(x)
Re:Well of course (Score:2)
Re:Well of course (Score:2)
Thanks
Re:Well of course (Score:2)
#define free(x) /* nothing going on here */
Their figuring? Well, if you never free anything, you'll never have to worry about dangling pointers. And those memory leaks? Just an encouragement for people to reboot and free up memory.
Re:Well of course (Score:2, Informative)
No, there is another line of books for Complete Idiots!
Re:Damn (Score:2)
hehe, you're a dummie, as now there's a book telling you how to use Solaris 9 ;)
Re:Damn (Score:2)
Re:Damn (Score:2)
Re:Damn (Score:2)
No seriously, got one from a friend. Nice little workstation. How does Xfree compare to Solaris' native X?
Re:Damn (Score:2)
You can read abit about my installation here. [gentoo.org]
Re:"For Dummies" is an Insulting Title (Score:5, Insightful)
Theres some sort of deal with "kids today", it was true even when I was in school. Intelligence and hard work is shunned. It makes you a nerd, or a geek. Ask any 15 year old girl what the square root of four is and she'll giggle and go "i dont know math!". She probably knows, but it's not cool to know math, so the act is that they dont. This drives me nuts, the "im pretending to be dumb because it's not cool to be smart" act.
Such with the dummies and idiots and morons books. You wouldnt want to be caught walking out of a bookstore with a copy of "Advanced Solaris 9 Setup and Maintainance". You'd look like a geek, a nerd.
But a "for dummies" book under your arm broadcasts the message that you dont know, and dont care about the subject, because you're just too cool.
I really cant stand the way ignorance and stupidity is glorified in western cultures. It's not an american thing, since I'm canadian and have lived in the UK - it seems to be a white thing.
We make heroes out of the stupidest people alive and hold them up as role models for our kids. The guy from "Dude wheres my car" is just supposed to be what every teenager wants to be. A fucking idiot who's barely functional.
Oh well.
Re:"For Dummies" is an Insulting Title (Score:3, Insightful)
Ask any 15 year old girl what the square root of four is and she'll giggle and go "i dont know math!". She probably knows, but it's not cool to know math, so the act is that they dont.
I recently tutored my girlfriend for the math portion of the Texas state college test (TASP) which determines if you need to take remedial courses or not. She had zero confidence in her own abilities, but when we were done she beat the passing score by 65 points and the College Algebra level score by 30 points. I can't t
Re:"For Dummies" is an Insulting Title (Score:2)
I really cant stand the way ignorance and stupidity is glorified in western cultures. It's not an american thing, since I'm canadian and have lived in the UK - it seems to be a white thing.
It's not a White Thing because it is also common in African American culture.
Re:*raises hand* (Score:2)
in other words, you need to get "A sense of humor, for Dummies" book.
Re:Because, for some reason.. (Score:2)
#exclude (windowsusers.h)
#exclude (visualstudio.h)
// of course after you
int main()