I'd hate to think a dumpster of Apple Lisa's was sent off to the scrap yard because Apple didn't want bad publicity.
Sun workstations are great hardware but they were not meant for general office use back in those days. While at Infinet in the late 1980s through the early 1990s, I backed up a Sun cluster and got a chance to sample those machines first hand. The company had a dozen or more of them in the engineering labs and at desktops and the computer room had a couple of Sun servers with one being solely for their Interleaf publishing documentation system. Today, Solaris 10.4 is far different and there is GNU with more "PC"-like programs available including Libre Office that allows for general office work.
Sadly, Oracle has discontinued the desktop and workstation hardware and now focuses on the servers only. This means their Sun Ray diskless workstations and Sun Ultra line are now no longer. While at Oracle, there were already piles of them being sent off to the scrapper. These were those units that the former Sun employees used at home and had to be returned after Oracle swallowed up Sun in the early 2010s. I was hired by Oracle in 2010 to support the influx of the Sun hardware group sales and engineers. I set up the additional 350 users and had them up and running in record time. For doing that, I received a VIP award.
Sun workstations are great hardware but they were not meant for general office use back in those days. While at Infinet in the late 1980s through the early 1990s, I backed up a Sun cluster and got a chance to sample those machines first hand. The company had a dozen or more of them in the engineering labs and at desktops and the computer room had a couple of Sun servers with one being solely for their Interleaf publishing documentation system. Today, Solaris 10.4 is far different and there is GNU with more "PC"-like programs available including Libre Office that allows for general office work.
Sadly, Oracle has discontinued the desktop and workstation hardware and now focuses on the servers only. This means their Sun Ray diskless workstations and Sun Ultra line are now no longer. While at Oracle, there were already piles of them being sent off to the scrapper. These were those units that the former Sun employees used at home and had to be returned after Oracle swallowed up Sun in the early 2010s. I was hired by Oracle in 2010 to support the influx of the Sun hardware group sales and engineers. I set up the additional 350 users and had them up and running in record time. For doing that, I received a VIP award.