Quote:"Beacouse it works"
Answer: NO.
Oh STFU. Solaris is great, I love it a lot on the Sun's I run it on, it even works great on a PC. But it is a GODS OWN BITCH (apologies in advance to any sensitive religious folk) to install Open Source software on to (compared to say Debian, or Fedora).
The package repository systems available are immature and all work to different rules (in a UNIX system that is so good because it is so holistic). It is in dire need of a system akin to atp-get or rpm so you're not left to install packages ad nauseam with Suns package installer and wrestle un-handled dependencies manually. Sun, thank the lord, are working to provide a lightweight, open source, more Linux-like OS based off of the Solaris kernel and frameworks, that will hopefully grow a decent, 21st century package system that keeps true to the holistic UNIX-like Solaris approach. Solaris is unique among old-industry UNIX as a UNIX that is slowly adapting to the 21st century, instead of pedaling the same UNIX from 1989 that everyone got used to. At the same time though, it also is keeping a vital element of integrity and continuity that Linux lost many years ago.
You have no right to tell people what OS to run on any machine. You're opinion is yours, and one I share for the most part, but frankly the way you express it is wrong, your attitude stinks. If you want to scream and rant go to digg.com. Computers are there to do what you want to do with them. If you can't do it with the 'native' OS then you have to look elsewhere. Linux is a versatile and portable OS, so it deserves to be run wherever it can thrive. It sucks on some platforms, but then again it's what your used to, and what support that platform has. Debian is very well supported on non-x86 platforms (it's one of few Linux distros that really has that diversity, normally reserved for BSDs).
Do what you want, with what you have, but don't try to be the voice and hands of others.