Fair enough. I forgot about PXE, never having used it. That said, I've never used PXE, so I don't know how it works.
Sun machines' ``boot net'' feature deals with bootp (or also DHCP in newer machines) to get an IP address, etc. It then can parse that information, possibly in combination with responses from a bootparam server, to boot anything you want. It even downloads the initial kernel from the server.
I think that PXE requires that you have a bootable image burned onto the ROM (but I could obviously be wrong). The Sun approach, though, is built into the hardware and requires absolutely nothing more than a computer onto which you can enter commands (it notably does not require an OS or even a hard drive).
Mac Open Firmware is exactly the same thing that's been in Suns for many moons (I forget how long, but it's been at least 10 years), soI bet that they can do the same thing, although I've not tried. In fact,
Open Firmware is an IEEE spec now.