Table of Contents
Sun - Sun Ray - Miscellaneous
Oracle - Sun Ray Server Software 4.0 Administrator’s Guide for Solaris - Sun Ray System Overview
archive.org - Sun Ray User Group
filibeto.org - Sun Ray User Group and the SunRay-Users mailing list
Articles/Blogposts
ZDNET - How and why to use Sun Ray by Paul Murphy on 2006-08-15.
Nico Maas - [SRSS 4.2] How to install Sunray Server 4.2 on Solaris 10?
Nico Maas - [SRSS 4.2] How to install Sun Ray Windows Connector 2.2 on Solaris 10?
Network Management - Sun Ray Server Software 5 (4.2) Solaris Installation
The Grey Blog - Installing Sun Ray Server Software on OpenSolaris 2009.06
The UNIX and Linux Forums - Sun Ray Install 5.4.5 on Solaris 11.3
blkperl - Installing Sunray Software Server (SRSS) on Centos 5.x
Installing the SunRay Server Software on Debian GNU/Linux
Don's Blog - Solaris 10 on ESXi5, with SunRay Server and Clients
Ubuntu documentation - UbuntuOnSunRay
OpenIndiana Docs - Hipster Handbook - Sun Ray Software
Videos
By clabretro on YouTube:
- Setting up Sun Ray Thin Clients from 2006 on 2023-06-25.
- Sun Ray Thin Clients Pt1: Hotdesking on 2023-08-16.
- Sun Ray Thin Clients Pt2: Actually Using Them on 2023-08-26.
- Sun Ray Thin Clients Pt.3: Using Windows on 2023-09-23.
- Setting up a Sun Ray 150 on 2024-11-02.
By Benedikt Stockebrand on YouTube:
Open-source Sun Ray Server
jOpenRay is new Open Source project aiming to improve the experience of thin clients administrators & users. Currently only supports Sun Ray 2 hardware by Sun Microsystems.
GitHub - classilla/kopenray is a fork of jOpenRay, an open-source Java server for Sun Ray 2 devices. Unfortunately, jOpenRay hasn't been updated since 2010 (though there have been modest attempts, some of which is in this codebase), and it has various issues with newer SunRay hardware and later JDKs. kOpenRay is a possibly intermittently potentially incompletely successful attempt to fix these problems. Like jOpenRay, kOpenRay runs anywhere Java does (including Windows, macOS, Linux and Solaris), and is free and open-source under the GNU Public License. This version of kOpenRay is only suitable for exploratory use on a secured LAN and should not be used on a production external-facing interface.