Solaris
Solaris is a UNIX operating system developed by Sun Microsystems.
SunOS is the older version of Unix from Sun Microsystems that existed before Solaris.
Java was, and is, being developed by Sun Microsystems.Java was, and is, being developed by Sun Microsystems.Java was, and is, being developed by Sun Microsystems.Java was, and is, being developed by Sun Microsystems.
The Unix operating system Sun Solaris originally developed by Sun Microsystems which is now known has been owned by Oracle corporation since January 2010. Solaris was initially released in June 1992.
Java was/is developed by Sun Microsystems, who has offices worldwide.
Java
Servers capable of running a variant of Unix are manufactured by many companies, including Sun Microsystems, IBM, Hewlett-Packard, Dell, and Apple.
Sun Microsystems, now brought out by the Oracle Corporation.
Java programming language is a software tool developed by Sun.
Oracle owns Java.Previous owner was Sun micro systems.
Both Solaris and FreeBSD share a common idea base. The BSD distribution from Berkeley was the starting point for FreeBSD and for SunOS, which is the earlier version of Solaris. As it stands, FreeBSD was developed primarily for the Intel-based chip, whereas Solaris runs primarily on the SPARC chip developed by Sun Microsystems (now part of Oracle). Lastly, Solaris is a proprietary, cost-based version of Unix, whereas FreeBSD is an open-source version.
To put it very generically, Linux is an operating system kernel, and UNIX is a certification for operating systems. The UNIX standard evolved from the original Unix system developed at Bell Labs. After Unix System V, it ceased to be developed as a single operating system, and was instead developed by various competing companies, such as Solaris (from Sun Microsystems), AIX (from IBM), HP-UX (from Hewlett-Packard), and IRIX (from Silicon Graphics). UNIX is a specification for baseline interoperability between these systems, even though there are many major architectural differences between them. Linux has never been certified as being a version of UNIX, so it is described as being "Unix-like." A comprehensive list of differences between Linux and "UNIX" isn't possible, because there are several completely different "UNIX" systems.