with
OpenWindows on Solaris Early releases of Solaris used
OpenWindows as the standard desktop environment. In Solaris 2.0 to 2.2, OpenWindows supported both
NeWS and
X applications, and provided
backward compatibility for
SunView applications from Sun's older desktop environment. NeWS allowed applications to be built in an
object-oriented way using
PostScript, a common printing language released in 1982. The
X Window System originated from
MIT's
Project Athena in 1984 and allowed for the display of an application to be disconnected from the machine where the application was running, separated by a network connection. Sun's original bundled SunView application suite was ported to X. Sun later dropped support for legacy SunView applications and NeWS with OpenWindows 3.3, which shipped with Solaris 2.3, and switched to
X11R5 with
Display Postscript support. The graphical look and feel remained based upon
OPEN LOOK. OpenWindows 3.6.2 was the last release under Solaris 8. The OPEN LOOK Window Manager (
olwm) and other OPEN LOOK-specific applications were dropped in Solaris 9, but support libraries were still bundled, providing long term binary backwards compatibility with existing applications. The OPEN LOOK Virtual Window Manager (olvwm) can still be downloaded for Solaris from sunfreeware and works on releases as recent as Solaris 10. (CDE) was
open sourced in August 2012. This is a screenshot of CDE running on Solaris 10. Sun and other Unix vendors formed an industry alliance to standardize Unix desktop environments. As a member of the
Common Open Software Environment (COSE) initiative, Sun helped co-develop the
Common Desktop Environment (CDE). This was an initiative to create a standard Unix desktop environment. Each vendor contributed different components:
Hewlett-Packard contributed the
window manager,
IBM provided the
file manager, and Sun provided the
e-mail and calendar facilities as well as drag-and-drop support (
ToolTalk). This new desktop environment was based upon the
Motif look and feel and the old OPEN LOOK desktop environment was considered legacy. CDE unified Unix desktops across multiple
open system vendors. CDE was available as an unbundled add-on for Solaris 2.4 and 2.5, and was included in Solaris 2.6 through 10. (JDS) running on Solaris 10 In 2001, Sun issued a preview release of the open-source desktop environment
GNOME 1.4, based on the
GTK+ toolkit, for Solaris 8. Solaris 9 8/03 introduced GNOME 2.0 as an alternative to CDE. Solaris 10 includes Sun's
Java Desktop System (JDS), which is based on GNOME and comes with a large set of applications, including
StarOffice, Sun's
office suite. Sun describes JDS as a "major component" of Solaris 10. The Java Desktop System is not included in Solaris 11 which instead ships with a stock version of GNOME. Likewise, CDE applications are no longer included in Solaris 11, but many libraries remain for binary backwards compatibility. The open source desktop environments
KDE and
Xfce, along with numerous other
window managers, also compile and run on recent versions of Solaris. Sun was investing in a new desktop environment called
Project Looking Glass since 2003. The project has been inactive since late 2006. ==License==