A Closer Look at SUSE 10
SilentBob4 writes to tell us that MadPenguin is running a review of the recently released SUSE 10.0. From the review: "Novell has made some interesting changes in distribution and development since our last review of SUSE Linux. Many say it's for the better and I'd say I'm inclined to go with that theory. To tell you the truth, I never thought I'd see the day SUSE opened up it's doors to the community to help expand and concert development efforts, but here we are in a world where SUSE is open and still making geeks sweat every time a new release comes out"
Why do people always review the install? I mean seriously, who gives a shit. I haven't heard anyone complaining about an install since 2000, and even in 1998 it really wasn't that hard with some documentation scribbled on a napkin. There's even a howto for installing linux on the carcass of a dead badger.
Microsoft isn't pushing their OS for its easy install. You never hear about OS X's install.
Why is linux judged by it's ease of install!? Who gives a flying rats ass. Does it work after it's installed? Probably not every well.
Yea SUSE 10 is great. The gui is really nice. But it still is not my default boot. One problem is that it doesn't like my wireless card on my laptop and for me thats more than important.
Its nice to be important but its more important to be nice
I've never understood what "just works" means. From my experience, every operating system (Windows, Mac, *nix) always has some problem/missing feature that needs a workaround.
I always find it unfair when Linux distros are labelled poor because they don't support somebody's hardware, like their wireless card not working. The Linux developers would happily develop drivers for software if they were given the hardware specs to do so, but that isn't the case and drivers must be created with little help from the manufacturer. For example, I'm sure Novell would love to have native drivers for every wireless card out there, but if the companies won't co-operate, the best they can do is the ugly hack of using the win32 driver wrapped in an emulation layer. It's similar to complaining about why you can't play Playstation 2 games on Xbox hardware; the latter was never designed to work on the former and Microsoft wouldn't offer any help to get it working, but that doesn't mean Playstation 2 games are rubbish.
I wasn't too pleased with it either - haven't used the most recent version, but I spent a little bit of time with the evaluation version last year. Seemed there were a lot of nice ideas, but a lot seemed kinda half-assed. Lots of stuff that would work really nicely if you used it just like they wanted you to use it, but then didn't support anything more esoteric. And then if you tried to go outside of the "standard stuff", you find undocumented and unfinished scripts and the like. I found it rather annoying... especially since it seemed relatively impossible to get help on it other than through the paid support, which I didn't pay for, of course. But it's really not the sort of distro I'm interested in - I much prefer the flexibility and transparency of Debian (fully realizing that half the transparency is a result of my knowing better where to look, having used Debian for about 8 years now). SuSE just seemed to have too much "do it our way, or don't do it at all!" mentality about it. But maybe if I used it more, I'd change my mind.
despite the increased hardware support, my wireless pc card (DWL-650 revP) still doesn't work with it... must I buy a new card to use suse?????????
My tech blog
What is diffrent between this and the simply mepis with KDE that i have dual booting? Will it actualy run at native resolution for my laptop? (mepis wont work at anything higher than 1024x768) better programs? why are there so many diffrent linux versions? why can't you all just get on the same page?
You're right, I'm sure Linux developers would be happy to work on driver support if the manufacturers were more forth-coming. I'm also sure that most Linux developers are also saints who donate to UNICEF, help old ladies across the street, and also only say "LOL" when they're actually laughing. None of that's relevant.
The problem is that none of this matters to the end-user who's giving Linux a shot for the first time. It doesn't matter whose fault it is that their digital camera doesn't work, or why their laptop's sound card can't play back sound. You just lost a customer.
my Xeon workstation has some win-sound card built in, and for the first time it made music after I installed SuSE 10 - never before used my main server for multimedia but now I can. Later that night it scared me again with BSOD screensaver finally coming up in the random selection. I also installed it on my Thinkpad T22 with wireless linksys card, it's all good. Used to be a paying RedHat customer from RH 5.0 to 8, but "crossed over" to SuSE at 9.0 and haven't looked back.
Well, to be fair, my parents haven't got a clue what a device driver is, neither could they install Windows XP from scratch. I wouldn't be suprised if a huge majority of other parents were similar.
First of all, of course you are blind:
e ssional/xfce4-desktop.htmle ssional/postgresql-server.html
.deb's).
http://www.novell.com/products/linuxpackages/prof
http://www.novell.com/products/linuxpackages/prof
Ok, mr I-know-it-all-master-of-the-universe?
I can tell you all the other clients (like xfce-mcs, xfce4-session) are there too. In fact, Im posting from a SUSE with XFCE right now. So next time, please do exactly what I said, and go to a mirror, add it as installation-source and do "yast -i postgresql", "yast -i xfce4-desktop", ok? Or, as I said too, get the boxed set and will be all there. The boxed dvd is easy for people with poor knowledge of the distro, and saves you time and problems, not to mention you wouldnt post incorrect information, ok?
I see you are not very knowledgeable in package management. apt-get just manages RPMs.... It cannot "cause rpm hell by conflicting with identical versions". Your phrase almost make me laugh. Said that, I dont recommend using another manager when you already have yast and y2pmsh.
What do you mean with "distro go obsolete in a matter of months"? You want SUSE to start upgrading madly to the new version everyday? This is not debian testing. This is a stable release. You dont get the release cycle thing? Since you dont, now you can also use SUSE 10.1alpha3, to stay on the edge.
I thiink you are a debian fan boy. Sorry, but its all it seems. If you want debian, go debian, but stop this non sense comments. If you refuse to pay, dont pay. If it keeps "commercial", certainly its not caused by usig RPM (or I cant have a commercial distro with
How does this get insightful, 2, when all I see is wrong information, and a little rant on "rpm distros"??
gosh