Monday April 17, 2006 I'll start with the punchline. Below is a picture of Mac OSX hosting a Solaris virtual machine, which itself has a Linux zone running on it.

I finally got myself a Mac Mini. I've been planning to buy one since Apple released the first x86-based models. Since I have no use for a computer that can't run Solaris, I had to wait for a few months. For me, the tipping point was not Apple's recent Boot Camp release, even though that does allow you to boot Solaris on a Mac. Instead, it was the announcement of an OS virtualization environment running on MacOSX. I assumed it was just a matter of time before VMware or Microsoft ported their virtualization tools, but some company I had never heard of beat them to it: Parallels.
The Parallels VM is much less featureful than VMware, but it is also much lighter weight. For my simple usage scenario, I really don't need most the bells and whistles VMware provides, so Parallels is fine.
I was able to get S10 FCS installed and running on a Parallels VM on the second try. It would have worked on the first try, but I got fed up with the DVD performance and killed the install. I was then able to Liveupgrade the system to BrandZ using the BrandZ build 35 DVD image.
Now the bad news. Parallels still has quite a way to go before it is ready for prime time - even for casual home use.
There is one level-0 issue that is a complete showstopper for anybody who plans to run Solaris (or any Unix): the '\' and '|' keys don't work. I guess Parallels doesn't do any testing of Unix-based systems at all, or this wouldn't have made it out the door.
Some other issues that I have run into so far
I've submitted a few of these problems to Parallels, but their response doesn't fill me with confidence:
Hello Nils!
Thank you for your interest in Parallels Workstation.
We appreciate your feedback.
We'll see how this product improves over the coming months. Since VMware is allegedly planning a Mac OSX release, Parallels has their work cut out for them.