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OpenSUSE 11.3 Is Here

lukehashj writes "The openSUSE Project is pleased to announce the release of the latest incarnation of openSUSE, with support for 32-bit and 64-bit systems. OpenSUSE 11.3 is packed with new features and updates including SpiderOak to sync your files across the Internet for free, Rosegarden for free editing of your audio files, improved indexing with Tracker, and updates to Mozilla Firefox, and Thunderbird."

12 of 156 comments (clear)

  1. Top features by gmuslera · · Score: 4, Insightful

    A bit, imho, far more relevant ones, are described in Top Features. Support for Btrfs, and the visual interface of Meego for netbooks, sound to me a bit more interesting, apart of the usual incremental improvement over previous versions.

  2. Yes (in Europe) by Sits · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I was at a European conference a week ago and there were quite a few attendees with laptops running some version of openSUSE. A previous UK computer science department I was in also used openSUSE as its distro.

  3. Re:Does anyone.... by Rydia · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I use openSuSE, as do most of the people I know. It doesn't have the warm fuzzies that people seem to get off Fedora and it doesn't have the nerd chic/new hotness feeling that Ubuntu has (which many, many others have had before, I might add), but it is a very well-maintained and established distro with probably the best configuration/installation (yast is very nice) of the lot, and has benefited from closeness to both the GNOME and KDE projects.

    It's a nice distro.

  4. SpiderOak? Rosegarden? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seriously, can't people who write software choose meaningful, easy-to-remember names for their programs?

    How the hell is 'rosegarden' supposed to make me think about editing audio files? And that 'SpiderOak' name is a joke, right?

    1. Re:SpiderOak? Rosegarden? by e9th · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How is "Firefox" supposed to make you think of browsing the web?

    2. Re:SpiderOak? Rosegarden? by kent_eh · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Seriously, can't people who write software choose meaningful, easy-to-remember names for their programs?

      How the hell is 'rosegarden' supposed to make me think about editing audio files? And that 'SpiderOak' name is a joke, right?

      Y'mean like Acid, or Abelton or Pinacle or Pro Tools?

      Tell me that someone new to the field would have any clue what type of software those names represent?

      --

      ---
      "I can't complain, but sometimes still do..." Joe Walsh
    3. Re:SpiderOak? Rosegarden? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It doesn't. That's why I don't use it.

  5. Re:Does anyone.... by jodosh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I for one do (and it is still in the top 5 on distrowatch). YaST is a wonderful tool if you have never used it. One place to edit just about every config file and deal with system admin is very useful. Also their integration with KDE is by far the best of all the distros I have tried in a long time.

  6. Re:What happened... by Jeng · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Well when you quit submitting quality links with great summaries this website has just gone to hell.

    Why don't you submit better stories with great summaries anymore?

    I am of course being sarcastic, but really if you want better submit better.

    --
    Don't know something? Look it up. Still don't know? Then ask.
  7. Re:Does anyone.... by Enderandrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It isn't as bleeding edge as Ubuntu, but the releases aren't nearly as broken.

    openSUSE has give us Compiz, Moonlight, Office 2007 support in OpenOffice, Exchange support in Evolution, Samba, etc.

    It is my distro of choice. And I also really like that they focus on putting out both really solid KDE and Gnome desktops.

    --
    http://blindscribblings.com - Tasty pop-culture in conceptual fashion.
  8. Re:suse is... by markdavis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And had Novell not gotten in bed with Microsoft, I might even consider SuSE. However, they did, and thus SuSE was completely removed from my radar (and most everyone else in our Linux User's Group. Now it is Mandriva, Fedora, and Ubuntu.

  9. Well Alrighty Then... by FlyingGuy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The EVIL Novell has done it again! OpenSuse which by the way is free as in $0.00 USD. Patches and updates are free as $0.00 USD. If you want Novel's SLES product, guess what it is free as well AND includes 60 days worth of updates and if you want it out farther then it costs you around $30.00 USD a month The NERVE! Those fuckers from Novel hell gaul selling support AND pushing all their changes back to the Free Version they are such bastards!

    You folks need to get that stick worked out of your collective asses. Novel's rock solid support of the Linux Community is on-par with Red Hat and all the rest of them and in many ways it is better.

    How many distros come with an Oracle option ready to role? Yast may not handle all the various Apache configuration strangeness the way you might like it, but if you use it as designed it works damn fine. It could have a much better Firewall config utility but they are getting there. I have installed it on many many different versions of hardware and in 99% of the cases it has just found all the parts bits and pieces and handled them quite well. I even put it on a ancient IBM Thinkpad and the only glitch was a display setting and one quick google search solved that problem.

    The SLED Distro is a great desktop OS and handles prety much anything you want to throw at it and then some and does it better then most any other Distro. So all you zealots can have a tall cool glass of Shut The Fuck up. And as for giving people a reason to migrate to MS, that's funny since I just moved an entire company ( 100 Desktops ) from Windows XP to OpenSuse.

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