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Sun Ray

The Sun Ray was a stateless thin client computer (and associated software) aimed at corporate environments, originally introduced by Sun Microsystems in September 1999 and discontinued by Oracle Corporation in 2014.[1] It featured a smart card reader and several models featured an integrated flat panel display.

Sun Ray
Sun Ray 1G thin client
ManufacturerOracle Corporation
TypeThin-client
Release dateSeptember 1999 (1999-09)
Lifespan1999–2014
Units sold500K+
MediaSmartcard
CPUMicroSPARC IIep
Memory8 MiB EDO DRAM
InputUSB
ConnectivityEthernet
Power110 V – 240 V 50/60 Hz
PredecessorNeWT
RelatedAppliance Link Protocol

The idea of a stateless desktop was a significant shift from, and the eventual successor to, Sun's earlier line of diskless Java-only desktops, the JavaStation.[2]

Predecessor edit

The concept began in Sun Microsystems Laboratories in 1997 as a project codenamed NetWorkTerminal (NeWT). The client was designed to be small, low cost, low power, and silent. It was based on the Sun Microelectronics MicroSPARC IIep. Other processors initially considered for it included Intel's StrongARM, Philips Semiconductors' TriMedia, and National Semiconductor's Geode. The MicroSPARC IIep was selected because of its high level of integration, good performance, low cost, and availability.

NeWT included 8 MiB of EDO DRAM and 4 MiB of NOR flash. The graphics controller used was the ATI Rage 128 because of its low power, 2D rendering performance, and low cost. It also included an ATI video encoder for TV-out (removed in the Sun Ray 1), a Philips Semiconductor SAA7114 video decoder/scaler, Crystal Semiconductor audio CODEC, Sun Microelectronics Ethernet controller, PCI USB host interface with 4 port hub, and I²C smart card interface. The motherboard and daughtercard were housed in an off-the-shelf commercial small form-factor PC case with internal +12/+5VDC auto ranging power supply.

NeWT was designed to have feature parity with a modern business PC in every way possible. Instead of a commercial operating system. the client ran a real-time operating system called "exec", which was originally developed in Sun Labs as part of an Ethernet-based security camera project codenamed NetCam. Less than 60 NeWTs were ever built and very few survived; one is in the collection of the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California.[3]

In July 2013, reports circulated that Oracle was ending the development of the Sun Ray and related products.[4] Scott McNealy (long-time CEO of Sun) posted about this on Twitter.[5] An official announcement was made on August 1, 2013, with the last order in February 2014.[1] Support and hardware maintenance were available until 2017.[6]

Design edit

In contrast to a thick client, the Sun Ray is only a networked display device, with applications running on a server elsewhere, and the state of the user's session being independent of the display. This enables another feature of the Sun Ray; portable sessions where a user can go from one Sun Ray to another and continue their work without closing any programs. With a smart card, all the user had to do was insert the card and they would be presented with their session. Reauthentication requirements depend on the mode of operation. For example, without the smart card the procedure was almost identical, except the user must specify their username as well as password. In either case, if a session did not yet exist, a new one would be created the first time the user connects.

Sun Ray clients are connected via an Ethernet network to a Sun Ray Server. Sun Ray Software (SRS) is available for the Solaris and Linux operating systems. Sun developed a separate network display protocol, Appliance Link Protocol (ALP), for the Sun Ray system.

VMware announced support for the protocol by VMware View in 2008.[7]

The Sun Ray Software has two basic modes of operation: generic session or kiosk mode. In a generic session, the user will see the Solaris or Linux login screen of the operating system that is running SRS. In kiosk mode, the login screen varies depending on the session type in use. Kiosk mode can be used for a number of different desktop or applications. Oracle has integrated a RDP client, VMware View client into the Sun Ray software that can be used in Kiosk mode to start a full screen Windows session. In this mode, no window manager or Unix desktop is started. The Windows environment can be any OS that supports RDP.

In 2007, Sun and UK company Thruput integrated the Sun Ray 2FS with 28" (2048 × 2048), 30" (2560 × 1600) and 56" (3840 × 2160) displays; in 2008 they trialed an external graphics accelerator that enables the Sun Ray to be used with any high resolution display.

Models edit

  • NetWork Terminal (NeWT) – Original Sun Labs prototype, no display[3]
  • Sun Ray 1 – supports displays up to 1280×1024 at 85 Hz
  • Sun Ray 1G – supports displays up to 1920×1200 at 75 Hz
  • Sun Ray 100 – integrated into a 17" CRT monitor
 
The Sun Ray 150
  • Sun Ray 150 – integrated into a 15" LCD monitor
  • Sun Ray 170 – integrated into a 17" LCD monitor
  • Sun Ray 2 – small footprint, low power (4 watts). 2 Versions exist, the original based on DDR memory, the newer one based on DDR2. Firmware is not compatible between the DDR and the DDR2 models and SRSS needs patches to work correctly with the newer variant.
  • Sun Ray 2FS – support for dual heads, 100BASE-FX
  • Sun Ray 270 – integrated into a 17" LCD, mountable
  • Sun Ray 3 – Supports graphics resolutions of up to 1920 × 1200, five Universal Serial Bus (USB) 2.0 ports, one serial port (DB9), One single-DVI-I video connector, 10/100/1000 Mbit/s (RJ45) Ethernet
  • Sun Ray 3i – Full HD 1920 × 1080 maximum resolution 16:9 widescreen 21.5" LCD display, five USB 2.0 ports, built-in smart card reader, VESA 100 × 100 mm mount and removable stand.
  • Sun Ray 3 plus – support for dual head Dual-Link DVI maximum resolution up to 2560 x 1600 30" LCD display, four Universal Serial Bus (USB) 2.0 ports, built-in smart card reader, one serial port (DB9), Gigabit Ethernet (RJ-45 and SFP), Energy Star 5.0 qualified (14.15 W in use), headphone and mic jacks.

The Sun Ray 3 models were the last in production; last order date February 28, 2014; last ship date August 31, 2014.

Sun's OEM partners produced Wi-Fi notebook versions of Sun Ray:

  • Comet 12 – Sun Ray 12" notebook produced by General Dynamics
  • Comet 15 – Sun Ray 15" notebook produced by General Dynamics
  • Jasper 320 – Sun Ray 2 notebook produced by Naturetech
  • Amber 808 – Sun Ray 2 tablet produced by Naturetech
  • Opal 608 – Sun Ray 2 tablet produced by Naturetech
  • Gobi 7 – Sun Ray 2 notebook produced by Aimtec
  • Gobi 8 – Sun Ray 2 notebook with 3G support produced by Aimtec
  • Ultra ThinPad – Sun Ray 2 notebook produced by Arima[8]
  • Ultra ThinTouch – Sun Ray 2 tablet produced by Arima
  • UltraSlim – Sun Ray 2 variant produced by Arima
  • Tadpole M1400 – Sun Ray 2 notebook with 3G support produced by Tadpole[9]

Hardware edit

The Sun Ray 1 clients initially used a 100 MHz MicroSPARC IIep processor, followed by a custom SoC version codenamed Copernicus (US 6,993,617 B2),[10] which was based on the MicroSPARC IIep core, but added 4 MiB of on-chip DRAM, USB, and a smart card interface in addition to the memory controller and PCI interface already on the MicroSPARC IIep.

The Sun Ray 2 and 3 clients use the MIPS architecture-based RMI Alchemy Au1550 processor.[11]

Software-only client edit

A pure software implementation, Sun Desktop Access Client,[12] was introduced as part of Sun Ray Software 5 (SRS5).[citation needed] This was later rebranded by Oracle as Oracle Virtual Desktop Client; it was discontinued along with the Sun Ray product line in 2014.

Microsoft Windows access edit

In commercial environments, Sun Rays were most commonly deployed as a thin client to access a Microsoft Windows desktop using the SRSS built-in RDP client uttsc. The desktop can be a Terminal Server session or a Virtual Machine (VDI). This setup is flexible and works well in many environments because the intermediate Sun Ray Server layer is transparent to the Windows desktop. At the same time however, this transparency can also become an issue for software that is location dependent. If location dependent information needs to be added it is possible to extend the functionality of the Sun Ray software with additional custom scripts. The Sun Ray Wiki offers a "Follow Me Printing"[13] setup as an example, e.g. a user always gets the nearest printer as default printer when going from room-to-room or location-to-location, also inside their Windows session. It is relatively easy for an administrator to extend and add to this functionality as required.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hawley, Adam (August 1, 2013). "Sun Ray Hardware Last Order Dates & Extension of Premier Support for Desktop Virtualization Software". Oracle. Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  2. ^ Shah, Rawn (November 2, 1999). "Here comes the Sun Ray". SunWorld. IDG. Retrieved 2008-08-18.
  3. ^ a b Sun Ray I prototype. Computer History Museum. Retrieved October 13, 2013. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  4. ^ Vaughan-Nichols, Steven J (July 15, 2013). "Oracle to halt development of Sun virtualization technologies". ZDNet. Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  5. ^ McNealy, Scott [@scottmcnealy] (July 16, 2013). "SunRay was one of my favorite Sun products. Bummer" (Tweet). Retrieved July 5, 2023 – via Twitter.
  6. ^ "Oracle Sun Ray Hardware Last Order Dates and Extension of Premier Support for Desktop Virtualization Software Document" (PDF). Oracle. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  7. ^ "VMware Delivers High-Performance Virtual Desktop Solution for Remote Users with Sun Microsystems' Sun Ray Software and Virtual Display Clients". Press release. VMware. May 19, 2008. Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  8. ^ Arima, TW.
  9. ^ Tadpole.
  10. ^ Patents.
  11. ^ . Old Sun web page. Sun. Archived from the original on April 21, 2006. Retrieved October 13, 2013.
  12. ^ "Sun Desktop Access Client 1.0 User Guide" (PDF). September 2009. Retrieved 2021-05-26.
  13. ^ (wiki), Sun Rays, archived from the original on 2009-02-27, retrieved 2010-03-14.

External links edit

  • Sun Ray (PDF), Oracle.
  • (PDF) (paper), Ten years, Sun, archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-12-25, retrieved 2009-03-20.
  • J open ray, an opensource server for Sun Rays.

other, uses, disambiguation, stateless, thin, client, computer, associated, software, aimed, corporate, environments, originally, introduced, microsystems, september, 1999, discontinued, oracle, corporation, 2014, featured, smart, card, reader, several, models. For other uses see Sun Ray disambiguation The Sun Ray was a stateless thin client computer and associated software aimed at corporate environments originally introduced by Sun Microsystems in September 1999 and discontinued by Oracle Corporation in 2014 1 It featured a smart card reader and several models featured an integrated flat panel display Sun RaySun Ray 1G thin clientManufacturerOracle CorporationTypeThin clientRelease dateSeptember 1999 1999 09 Lifespan1999 2014Units sold500K MediaSmartcardCPUMicroSPARC IIepMemory8 MiB EDO DRAMInputUSBConnectivityEthernetPower110 V 240 V 50 60 HzPredecessorNeWTRelatedAppliance Link ProtocolThe idea of a stateless desktop was a significant shift from and the eventual successor to Sun s earlier line of diskless Java only desktops the JavaStation 2 Contents 1 Predecessor 2 Design 3 Models 4 Hardware 5 Software only client 6 Microsoft Windows access 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksPredecessor editThe concept began in Sun Microsystems Laboratories in 1997 as a project codenamed NetWorkTerminal NeWT The client was designed to be small low cost low power and silent It was based on the Sun Microelectronics MicroSPARC IIep Other processors initially considered for it included Intel s StrongARM Philips Semiconductors TriMedia and National Semiconductor s Geode The MicroSPARC IIep was selected because of its high level of integration good performance low cost and availability NeWT included 8 MiB of EDO DRAM and 4 MiB of NOR flash The graphics controller used was the ATI Rage 128 because of its low power 2D rendering performance and low cost It also included an ATI video encoder for TV out removed in the Sun Ray 1 a Philips Semiconductor SAA7114 video decoder scaler Crystal Semiconductor audio CODEC Sun Microelectronics Ethernet controller PCI USB host interface with 4 port hub and I C smart card interface The motherboard and daughtercard were housed in an off the shelf commercial small form factor PC case with internal 12 5VDC auto ranging power supply NeWT was designed to have feature parity with a modern business PC in every way possible Instead of a commercial operating system the client ran a real time operating system called exec which was originally developed in Sun Labs as part of an Ethernet based security camera project codenamed NetCam Less than 60 NeWTs were ever built and very few survived one is in the collection of the Computer History Museum in Mountain View California 3 In July 2013 reports circulated that Oracle was ending the development of the Sun Ray and related products 4 Scott McNealy long time CEO of Sun posted about this on Twitter 5 An official announcement was made on August 1 2013 with the last order in February 2014 1 Support and hardware maintenance were available until 2017 6 Design editIn contrast to a thick client the Sun Ray is only a networked display device with applications running on a server elsewhere and the state of the user s session being independent of the display This enables another feature of the Sun Ray portable sessions where a user can go from one Sun Ray to another and continue their work without closing any programs With a smart card all the user had to do was insert the card and they would be presented with their session Reauthentication requirements depend on the mode of operation For example without the smart card the procedure was almost identical except the user must specify their username as well as password In either case if a session did not yet exist a new one would be created the first time the user connects Sun Ray clients are connected via an Ethernet network to a Sun Ray Server Sun Ray Software SRS is available for the Solaris and Linux operating systems Sun developed a separate network display protocol Appliance Link Protocol ALP for the Sun Ray system VMware announced support for the protocol by VMware View in 2008 7 The Sun Ray Software has two basic modes of operation generic session or kiosk mode In a generic session the user will see the Solaris or Linux login screen of the operating system that is running SRS In kiosk mode the login screen varies depending on the session type in use Kiosk mode can be used for a number of different desktop or applications Oracle has integrated a RDP client VMware View client into the Sun Ray software that can be used in Kiosk mode to start a full screen Windows session In this mode no window manager or Unix desktop is started The Windows environment can be any OS that supports RDP In 2007 Sun and UK company Thruput integrated the Sun Ray 2FS with 28 2048 2048 30 2560 1600 and 56 3840 2160 displays in 2008 they trialed an external graphics accelerator that enables the Sun Ray to be used with any high resolution display Models editNetWork Terminal NeWT Original Sun Labs prototype no display 3 Sun Ray 1 supports displays up to 1280 1024 at 85 Hz Sun Ray 1G supports displays up to 1920 1200 at 75 Hz Sun Ray 100 integrated into a 17 CRT monitor nbsp The Sun Ray 150Sun Ray 150 integrated into a 15 LCD monitor Sun Ray 170 integrated into a 17 LCD monitor Sun Ray 2 small footprint low power 4 watts 2 Versions exist the original based on DDR memory the newer one based on DDR2 Firmware is not compatible between the DDR and the DDR2 models and SRSS needs patches to work correctly with the newer variant Sun Ray 2FS support for dual heads 100BASE FX Sun Ray 270 integrated into a 17 LCD mountable Sun Ray 3 Supports graphics resolutions of up to 1920 1200 five Universal Serial Bus USB 2 0 ports one serial port DB9 One single DVI I video connector 10 100 1000 Mbit s RJ45 Ethernet Sun Ray 3i Full HD 1920 1080 maximum resolution 16 9 widescreen 21 5 LCD display five USB 2 0 ports built in smart card reader VESA 100 100 mm mount and removable stand Sun Ray 3 plus support for dual head Dual Link DVI maximum resolution up to 2560 x 1600 30 LCD display four Universal Serial Bus USB 2 0 ports built in smart card reader one serial port DB9 Gigabit Ethernet RJ 45 and SFP Energy Star 5 0 qualified 14 15 W in use headphone and mic jacks The Sun Ray 3 models were the last in production last order date February 28 2014 last ship date August 31 2014 Sun s OEM partners produced Wi Fi notebook versions of Sun Ray Comet 12 Sun Ray 12 notebook produced by General Dynamics Comet 15 Sun Ray 15 notebook produced by General Dynamics Jasper 320 Sun Ray 2 notebook produced by Naturetech Amber 808 Sun Ray 2 tablet produced by Naturetech Opal 608 Sun Ray 2 tablet produced by Naturetech Gobi 7 Sun Ray 2 notebook produced by Aimtec Gobi 8 Sun Ray 2 notebook with 3G support produced by Aimtec Ultra ThinPad Sun Ray 2 notebook produced by Arima 8 Ultra ThinTouch Sun Ray 2 tablet produced by Arima UltraSlim Sun Ray 2 variant produced by Arima Tadpole M1400 Sun Ray 2 notebook with 3G support produced by Tadpole 9 Hardware editThe Sun Ray 1 clients initially used a 100 MHz MicroSPARC IIep processor followed by a custom SoC version codenamed Copernicus US 6 993 617 B2 10 which was based on the MicroSPARC IIep core but added 4 MiB of on chip DRAM USB and a smart card interface in addition to the memory controller and PCI interface already on the MicroSPARC IIep The Sun Ray 2 and 3 clients use the MIPS architecture based RMI Alchemy Au1550 processor 11 Software only client editA pure software implementation Sun Desktop Access Client 12 was introduced as part of Sun Ray Software 5 SRS5 citation needed This was later rebranded by Oracle as Oracle Virtual Desktop Client it was discontinued along with the Sun Ray product line in 2014 Microsoft Windows access editIn commercial environments Sun Rays were most commonly deployed as a thin client to access a Microsoft Windows desktop using the SRSS built in RDP client uttsc The desktop can be a Terminal Server session or a Virtual Machine VDI This setup is flexible and works well in many environments because the intermediate Sun Ray Server layer is transparent to the Windows desktop At the same time however this transparency can also become an issue for software that is location dependent If location dependent information needs to be added it is possible to extend the functionality of the Sun Ray software with additional custom scripts The Sun Ray Wiki offers a Follow Me Printing 13 setup as an example e g a user always gets the nearest printer as default printer when going from room to room or location to location also inside their Windows session It is relatively easy for an administrator to extend and add to this functionality as required See also editDell FX100 Sun VDIReferences edit a b Hawley Adam August 1 2013 Sun Ray Hardware Last Order Dates amp Extension of Premier Support for Desktop Virtualization Software Oracle Retrieved October 13 2013 Shah Rawn November 2 1999 Here comes the Sun Ray SunWorld IDG Retrieved 2008 08 18 a b Sun Ray I prototype Computer History Museum Retrieved October 13 2013 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Vaughan Nichols Steven J July 15 2013 Oracle to halt development of Sun virtualization technologies ZDNet Retrieved October 13 2013 McNealy Scott scottmcnealy July 16 2013 SunRay was one of my favorite Sun products Bummer Tweet Retrieved July 5 2023 via Twitter Oracle Sun Ray Hardware Last Order Dates and Extension of Premier Support for Desktop Virtualization Software Document PDF Oracle Retrieved April 26 2014 VMware Delivers High Performance Virtual Desktop Solution for Remote Users with Sun Microsystems Sun Ray Software and Virtual Display Clients Press release VMware May 19 2008 Retrieved October 13 2013 Arima TW Tadpole Patents Sun Ray 2 Virtual Display Client Specifications Old Sun web page Sun Archived from the original on April 21 2006 Retrieved October 13 2013 Sun Desktop Access Client 1 0 User Guide PDF September 2009 Retrieved 2021 05 26 SRSS addon Follow me printing wiki Sun Rays archived from the original on 2009 02 27 retrieved 2010 03 14 External links editSun Ray PDF Oracle Sun Ray User Group The interactive performance of SLIM a stateless thin client architecture PDF paper Ten years Sun archived from the original PDF on 2006 12 25 retrieved 2009 03 20 J open ray an opensource server for Sun Rays Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sun Ray amp oldid 1187909361, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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