SUSE Linux 10.1 Screenshot Tour
An anonymous reader writes "Distrowatch reports - Following some eight months of testing, the openSUSE project has finally released the long-delayed and much-awaited SUSE Linux 10.1: 'After lot of work and several delays, we proudly announce the availability of SUSE Linux 10.1. As usual, we ship all the latest open source packages available at the time. We want to give special mention to Xgl for 3D acceleration on the desktop, NetworkManager for getting painless WiFi access everywhere, the completely open source AppArmor 2.0, and the full integration of Xen 3 in YaST.'
OSDir has some great screenshots of the fresh SUSE Linux in the SUSE Linux 10.1 Screenshot Tour."
This is looking great!
Nice simple clean theme unified across KDE & Gnome, the install, the boot screen, partition manager, etc. They all look the same & really pretty nice.
Good job Suse!
Oh - and this release includes XGL - if anyone wants to have a look at what it looks like - check out this video (I think it's Suse 10, but with lots of extra's included in 10.1) - man it looks nice!
There are shills on slashdot. Apparently, I'm one of them.
*WHEN* will osdir change their image viewer to something smarter? Loading all images again every time you select a new screenshot is kinda tedious, and probably adds to the strain on their server, what with all the times osdir's screenshot galleries get mentioned on /.
:D
Add a JS image swap script, keep the current linking as it is (to appease the usability poo-flingers), and save bandwidth!
That said, Suse looks nice!
Now with NetworkManager, I can wardrive again! Thank God for NetworkManager!
I always liked SuSE and found it is easy to use yet good and solid and easy to get into when you want to do something yourself. I just got Mandriva 2006 though so I will not rush out and buy it. With all these releases it is a bit like Windows, lots of hype but not really that much changes.
I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
Does anyone recognise the multilingual background in this screenshot? I've seen it before somewhere, while working for Sun I think... perhaps a Solaris screen... or something to do with the old java stations?
Time is an illusion. Lunchtime doubly so. - Douglas Adams
is yast still slower than a one-legged turtle on ambien?
It might have XGL eye candy, but it's running an outdated version of GNOME. Is SUSE still favouring their KDE heritage? It was Novell that sort of pushed GNOME upon SUSE when they bought them.
how come so many germans use it? Is it originally from there, or is there some other interesting reason? Just curious...
Nyhetsankaret.com -- det bÃsta av Sveriges Nyhetssido
Last time I wrote on Slashdot that Mandriva was installing fine but refused to even run on my laptop I got modded into oblivion.
;-)
So it's with great joy I have to say that I've been working with SuSE 10.1RC3 for a couple of weeks now and it really IS very nice. I have a brand new laptop: Acer 5612, Dual Core, NVidia 3D card, etc.
In hours I got everything working, *including* Xgl which is nice.
Special thanks to the MPlayer guys who installed the video codecs on it at Linuxtag in Wiesbaden.
Hey, I'm even starting to like Gnome. Who would have though it possible on SuSE?
Cheers,
Matt
News about the Kettle Open Source project: on my blog
I'm becoming a little dissapointed with reviews like these where the main focus is on screenshots and the way the GUI looks. That always reminds me about the first wave of "Vista reviews" which went "A revolutionary 3D desktop interface" and somewhere further along the article would be some mentioning about the (IMO interesting) new security enhancements and all that.
;-)
In a way articles like these clearly show that Linux is getting to a level where people can indeed focus on looks and decide on that instead of worrying about issues like installing since that has been dumbed down tremendously. Linux is becoming more and more mainstream. Yet this also saddens me since I'm wondering if this also doesn't confuse more and more people that Linux is a graphical based OS instead of commandline. Oh well, I'm probably getting older, I yern for the days where we had wild articles describing these awesome new features called Xen and UML which had been embedded into SuSE Linux. That was also a major improvement not too long ago, and a clear signal that SuSE was following the Linux market and its new additions up close. But now....
Oh well, there's always Debian
In this age of AJAX hypeness, can't OSDir come up with a better way to display screenshots? I'm getting a little tired of their...
Scroll down, scroll right, click... scroll down, scroll right, click...
And, yes, I'm running beyond 1024x768.
I'm against picketing, but I don't know how to show it.
The fact that the install covers 23 screenshots should tell you that they need to seriously streamline it. Xandros takes a half a dozen mouse clicks, and it's done. PCLinuxOS (which I think is the best home user desktop distro) takes about the same. PC-BSD is very simple as well.
An install should consist of:
1. Create users.
2. Would like me to create the partitions for you? (offer an advanced feature as well)
3. Are you going to use DHCP, or a static address?
4. Would you like to review the software that is going to be installed?
5. Click next to complete.
That's it.
Those who created the OS should know the apps that 95% of computer users use. A web browser (with plugins pre-installed), an e-mail reader, multimedia apps, games, OpenOffice, and of course, the hardware correctly probed and installed. The security settings should be reasonable, and the first set of updates should be applied automatically.
Once the PC is up, take users to a Welcome screen, and ask if they would like to setup automatic updates, install additional software, and point them to an FAQ, or let them know how to get help.
Suse does many of these things right, but bombarding the user with so many questions during the install makes an intimidating first impression that turns users off.
Because teenage pranks are fun when you're about to die!
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
Why the heck is this guy moderated as a Troll? Seriously, we need to stop giving mods to people who don't understand that dissent is not a troll. Trolling should be reserved specifically for people who say something without support such as, "Suse sucks." If I made a comment that said, Suse sucks, you could Troll me. The difference is that he attempts to back up his argument, whereas a troll just says it to start a fight. Just because he doesn't give great reasons, doesn't mean he's a Troll. As it is, I'll probably get a nice Troll or Offtopic for this post, but seriously the modding abuse needs to stop.
/rant
If you don't like what they say, leave a comment and argue your point of view. I'm tired of Apple and Nintendo fanboys running around modding everyone who says that Apple or Nintendo is horrible and has support for their argument. Obviously it's not the case here, but it's the same thing. The guy made his point, if you disagree then say so, don't mod it Troll.
> As far as other choises go, the obvious one Ubuntu is way too much a software for hippies by hippies. I would prefer some German precision in my Linux.
I
Are you trying to say Ubuntu is easier?
Here is a typical example of me doing something under SuSE and one under Ubuntu.
SuSe: Choose ATi driver from driver list in YasT's graphic card settings
Ubuntu: https://wiki.ubuntulinux.org/BinaryDriverHowto/AT
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
There used to be a list of working cards, and my ATI rv280 (9200pro) didn't work with xgl.. Is that fixed?
I really reccommend you take a look at the alternative repositories availible for Mandriva, to expirence Mandriva to it's fullest
Change is certain; progress is not obligatory.
Keep in mind that the best trolls appear to be backing up their arguments so that more people will bite.
To be frank, I do not see where the parent poster has backed up his arguments. "bloated and over engineered"? How? Is SuSE slower than other distros? Does it consume more memory? More disk space? They should "dumb it down" a bit... How? It is a problem of the number of applications installed? The number of options in the menus? The selection of applications that should be changed to include simpler ones?
And like most like most good trolls, the poster adds a competing project into the mix so that even more people will bite: "Ubuntu is way too much a software for hippies by hippies". Again, without giving any explanation.
Disclaimer: I do not use SUSE. I did not moderate the parent post. I am not sure that I would have moderated it as Troll, but I do not disagree either.
It's more like: // you will find it if you search apt by desciption // most likely installed already // I don't think that's needed anymore but I use Nvidia cards
apt-get install xorg-driver-fglrx
apt-get install linux-restricted-modules-$(uname -r)
dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg
and can be done in Synaptic where you can click your way through
This is something I have NEVER understood, screenshots of a WindowManager that is the same WindowManager as the one used by other distro's which we all know what it looks like already. Ok there are screenshots of KDE, only difference from every other implimentation of KDE is the Theme, and screenshots of Gnome, again only difference from all others is the theme. I can understand screenshots of the installer, and YaST, but of apps and configs of the Window Manager, what is the difference from going to KDE's website and looking at their screnshots? It's like when I bought SuSe 10.0 in the box and on the back it had a screenshot of a KDE workspace, I thought to myself, "Yup, that's KDE, Yup, same as every other KDE screenshot I have seen". What Iam interested in is actual Version numbers, for which a list is much easier to read than the "About" screen. Ah well I just thought that was funny, not trying to troll, just something that pops into my head everytime I see a Workspace screenshot.
Kosh: "Understanding is a 3 edged sword, your side, their side, the Truth."
i've tried suse 9.1 back in the day and since then only touch slackware
now i call yast Yet Another sucky Setup Tool
i truelly hope they've improved it because albeit it looks nice
Yast is notably faster now, at least the main window loads faster. The new package manager works faster too.
C-x C-c
The "Start" icon in gnome looks like an erect penis. http://shots.osdir.com/slideshows/637_or/26.png