SUSE 9.2 Released 352
peterprior writes "Novell have issued a press release announcing SUSE Linux 9.2. The new version comes with kernel 2.6, KDE 3.3, Gnome 2.6 and features (amongst other things) enhanced wireless support as well as Evolution 2.0 with Groupwise / Exchange connectivity. The WYSIWYG web development tool Nvu is also included. The new release is expected to hit the retail shelves in early November."
Wireless (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Wireless (Score:2, Insightful)
I've got a WMP54GS card that i've been completely unable to get working with ndiswrapper.
I absolutely love gentoo, but if SuSE can get this working I'll move back. (haven't used SuSE since 8.2)
P.S. if anyone has info on getting a Linksys WMP54GS wireless network card working with gentoo, i'd really appreciate a nudge in the right direction.
Re:Wireless (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Wireless (Score:3, Interesting)
You're making stuff up... (Score:3, Informative)
Main memory: At least 128 MB; 256 MB recommended
And that's probably for the default kde desktop install. If you use something lighter you should be ok with less memory.
And, of course, it will probably install even if you're running on much less than the minimum req.
Re:You're making stuff up... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wireless (Score:3, Informative)
It is unbearably slow in KDE with less than 256, but since I'm using Windowmaker, it's just fine.
Amazing how many knee-jerk reactions to the parent post without checking the actual requirements.
And as a side note, I've installed 9.1 on 2 different laptops and 5 different laptops. The only driver that didn't work "out of the box" was a VIA chipset's sound card (don't remember the chipset number -- I'
Re:Wireless (Score:4, Interesting)
Then install OpenBSD [openbsd.org]. If the card is Prism2 [openbsd.org] based, you can easily turn your shiny new OpenBSD gateway to an access point. No support for Atheros based card due to the propertiary and binary HAL component needed to make them work. OpenBSD does not accept unfree drivers.
For wireless security the authpf - authenticating gateway user shell [openbsd.org] is quite handy. Or you can just use VPN [openbsd.org] that is part of base install.
Re:Wireless (Score:2)
Well then, the optimal route might be to learn to get comfortable with a system that isn't actively maintained.
Cost vs. Value (Score:3, Interesting)
Unless your time is worthless you would have been better off putting some money into a decent laptop with a wireless card from a vendor that doesn't solely provide windows-binary drivers and no specs as Broadcom doe
Exchange ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Exchange ? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why is this so? Because "IT" dopes are ass backwards. They put linux on the desktop and MS in the server room.
Re:Exchange ? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Exchange ? (Score:2)
Re:Exchange ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Exchange ? (Score:2)
Re:Exchange ? (Score:5, Interesting)
I was once an admin for a M$ shop, and ran the Exchange Server 5.5. The higher-ups would get so damned pissed at me 'cause I simply refused to use the entire calendar/planner/contact-list crap that was part of LookOut. I just couldn't (and still can't) stomach that stuff. Yet I somehow managed to get the important shit done.
Please, will someone tell me what's so useful about the Exchange/Outlook combo (or either half, for that matter) that a business will spend the money on the MS Server, the Exchange Server, CALs, and the Windows/Outlook licesnes?
In an age of such fierce competition and cost-cutting measurse to increase the bottom line, I fail to see how a business can justify canning decent employees and cutting benefits, yet they're still willing to pay the MS crack dealer the annual licensing fees. Providing pet features for management doesn't seem like a good reason to me.
In all honesty, I continue to be stumped by this practice. The open source solutions we have available today are light years ahead of the commercial offerings we had ten years ago. Yet, we somehow managed with the tools back then. This isn't about not enjoying progress -- I'm no software Luddite -- it's about freedom (in the RMS sense). Isn't a little growing pain and inconvenience worth not having to worry about the BSA and the annual software audit?
Re:Exchange ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Assistants can also maintain their boss's calendar, managers can assign tasks for their staff, storing everything on the server makes upgrading to new machines easy, and having everything together in one app just makes sense.
Now the benefit for a 40 person small business is pretty much zero but for once you get over 100 people the per person cost really isn't that much considering the savings in time and aggravation. You can piss on a lot of things from Microsoft but Outlook/Exchange (especially Outlook 2003) and Excel are two areas I will defend to the death (ok maybe not literally).
Re:Exchange ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh, gimme a break. It's not just me -- thousands of people plan stuff w/o Exchange just fine. I submit the many cases where hundreds of people planned on USENET, IRC, IM, or email. Look at flash mobs -- you think they have an aan Exchange server managing this stuff?
Damn,
Re:Exchange ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Yeah, who's kid works at Microsoft and needed to make quota?
Re:Exchange ? (Score:3, Insightful)
No open-source solution has shared calendars on the desktop. Oh, sure, if you want a separate web app, you can go to lots of apps. And email? IMAP allows sharing folders, no problem. LDAP takes care of contacts (so long as you're willing to hear your users complain that they can't update the LDAP directory themselves, or don't care to use umpteen billion tools which are badly UI designed in order to do so). But iCal/vCal, for whatever reason, just hasn't (yet) taken off as the prot
Why Exchange (Score:3, Insightful)
When it comes to people making purchase decisions, perception is reality. A lot of people are convinced they need the Outlook/Exchange combo. How good or bad of a decision that is does not matter -- they are convinced. If I (as a systems integrator) don't offer Exchange as an option, customers go somewhere else, I go out of business, and Microsoft gains more traction.
Now, as far as pros and cons go, the Exchange/Outlook combo has a number of things in the "pro" ca
Re:Exchange ? (Score:2)
Re:Exchange ? (Score:5, Interesting)
My clients love it -- they get a desktop they recognize and the stability of a Linux server while not paying licensing to Microsoft for anything beyond the Dell MS tax.
For what its worth, yes, some of them even run Open Office on Windows.
Re:Exchange ? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Exchange ? (Score:4, Insightful)
While true, you miss the point.
Outlook runs on Microsoft Windows. You have to pay Microsoft for Windows. Outlook is sold as both a standalone product, and as a component of Office. You have to pay Microsoft for both of those.
If Linux - anything that is not Microsoft - replaces a Microsoft product, they loose twice. First, they loose money from not having the next upgrade, and far more importantly their strangle hold gaurenteeing lots of money from future upgrades is loosened. The later (long term revenue) is so important that they have often given away the former (quick money from a license today). Think IE. Think all the features of Windows, that they could have charged for, that they give away -- things that prevously could be had by 3rd party vendors.
If any non-Microsoft product replaces a Microsoft product then the whole system starts to fall apart.
Who's a dope? (Score:2)
everything else, front and back, is Linux, Mac or Solaris.
Frankly, I don't know any of the "dopes" you refer to. Most IT people who use Linux (BSD, whatever) have Linux on their own desktops if they can, but otherwise start in the server room.
Re:Exchange ? (Score:2)
It's still an amazing feature, and could be an Outlook replacement - but it doesn't make use of the more closely guarded RPCs/caching/etc. that an Outlook/Exchange combo uses.
Re:Exchange ? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Exchange ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Hold on, its not released yet (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Hold on, its not released yet (Score:2)
Re:Hold on, its not released yet (Score:3, Informative)
"Novell today announced the November availability of SUSE® LINUX Professional 9.2, providing Linux newcomers and enthusiasts with the latest advancements in open source technology.
Re:Hold on, its not released yet (Score:2)
Looks like a good release for the KDE fans, but I'll be waiting for Fedora Core 3 myself... gotta love Gnome 2.8.
-Erwos
Gnome and KDE? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Gnome and KDE? (Score:2)
From my experience with 9.1, the free downloadable ISO image only includes KDE. You have to install GNOME by ftp from their web site if you want it. Given that this would have been over a modem for me, I didn't bother...
Re:Gnome and KDE? (Score:2)
Re:Gnome and KDE? (Score:2)
Re:Gnome and KDE? (Score:3, Informative)
Probably. It hasn't even been moved into "unstable" in oh-so-bleeding-edge Gentoo. :)
KDE 3.3's been out for an extra month, which I'm sure helped.
Re:Gnome and KDE? (Score:5, Interesting)
1) The gnome and kde developers arn't arch enemies.
2) Distros that want more users want both desktops.
What does this mean? A lot of colaberation, quite a bit through freedeskop.org. Little things like all my gnome apps now show up in the kde start menu without any effort on my part are a big deal (and vice versa). Everyone understands that the better the two desktops behave together (not code wise, but behavior wise) the more the user wins.
One neat project which I don't think (might be wrong) anyone is working on right now is a common icon set. When gnome or kde load up the icon "cut" it should be the same. Help create an icon set (without a slant to the current gnome or kde) and then get it in freedesktop.org and I bet you that distros would adopt it. If you are interested in helping with this or other colaberation projects head over to freedesktop.org.
Some other ones that would be nice to have:
-A common bookmark and cookie storage standard (way to many browsers these days)
-Along with a common icon set, a standard for the default toolbar format (size, and with or without text and text placement)
Down the road expect distros to be less and less KDE or Gnome only.
-Benjamin Meyer
How they feel on 9.1 Pro (and 8.0 Enterprise) (Score:3, Informative)
I prefered the version of GNOME that came in RH8, but the new one is plenty GNOMish under SuSe. I'm less familiar with KDE, but it certainly looks and feels like KDE to me.
Since I'm running
Re:Gnome and KDE? (Score:2, Interesting)
Screenshots of Novell Linux 10 have been primarily using a Ximian-like GNOME desktop. It appears that while KDE will continue to get development, the "face" of Novell Linux will be the Ximian product.
That makes sense given how much influence the Ximian employees have retained in Novell's Linux decision making process.
SUSE (Score:5, Interesting)
Has anyone used Nvu in a production enviroment and/or used Dreamweaver as well? I'd like to know how your experience was, versus the two of them.
I already have the majority of the programming team using SUSE for Java development. I'd like to move over our developers. (they build out HTML/JSP/PHP pages for us and the designers)
The only thing stopping them is, is their love of Dreamweaver. (Which I've never liked, it's a resource hog)
Josh
Re:SUSE (Score:2)
lack of templates == dealkiller (Score:2)
Seriously, one of my guys REALLY loves orange text. It's just not gonna happen.
We'd love to move off of DW, as we're getting tired of some of its odd quirks. Anybody got any OSS recommendations? I'm all ears.
Re:SUSE (Score:2, Informative)
Btw., just thought I'd mention that Lindows is behind the development of nvu and that the chief developer for it is the guy who developed mozilla composer (on which nvu is based).
Re:SUSE (Score:2)
If you want lots of flashy graphics and flash animation, Zope is not the best route, though.
Crossover Office (Score:2)
Need I say more :) ?
Re:SUSE (Score:5, Informative)
Nvu (Score:3, Informative)
The biggest missing part at this point is the file-management Dreamweaver has tackled so well. In Dreamweaver you can define a local site as well as a remote site, work on local files and upload them easily, browse remote files, etc., etc.
But Nvu so far lets you define one site, that site being your remote, live site. Too non-useful yet.
That said, Nvu will get there eventually, and it should rival Dr
X.org (Score:3, Interesting)
Will this include the new Composite and XDamage extensions?
Re:X.org (Score:3, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Which version of 2.6??? (Score:2, Informative)
So, yeah, that version.
Re:Which version of 2.6??? (Score:3, Informative)
Distribution kernels typically add a number of patches to the vanilla version in order to better meet the needs of their users. This includes features like lkcd or external filesystems, but more importantly, it means that it has critical bug fixes that weren't released into a vanilla release kernel.
The SUSE Linux 9.2 kernel carries the version number of 2.6.8, but is actually based on 2.6.9-rc2, with critical bug fixes beyond that. Since 2.6.9 isn't yet released, it would be inaccurat
Re:Which version of 2.6??? (Score:5, Interesting)
For what its worth, I compile my own kernel with my own options, but no patches applied.
Also, it runs Wine fine, and I play Morrowind regularly with it.
Re: (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Which version of 2.6??? (Score:5, Informative)
Personal Edition? (Score:5, Interesting)
However, it doesn't seem to be clear yet, if Suse will just not release a boxed version of the personal edition, or if they even stop the distribution of the personal edition iso for free downloads.
Any infos?
Re:there will be no personal any more (Score:3, Informative)
Well, you know smth is out of sync... (Score:2)
WTF ? Released ? (Score:5, Informative)
Currently, it's as much "released" as Longhorn.
The correct headline would have said "SuSE 9.2 announced", or sometime like that.
Rainer
NOOO!!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Announced, not released (Score:3, Informative)
SUSE 9.2 Announced
It's due for release early November
Novell buying SuSE could be the best thing for SuS (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Novell buying SuSE could be the best thing for (Score:3, Informative)
I bought 9.1 and I might download the 9.2 iso and upgrade, we'll see when the time comes.
Re:Novell buying SuSE could be the best thing for (Score:2)
Failing that, wouldn't it have been possible to perform an FTP or HTTP install? I know many distributions let you do it now, but I'm not too sure about then.
Re:Novell buying SuSE could be the best thing for (Score:5, Interesting)
Then you must only be a few years old. Come on! SUSE had free ISO downloads clear up to 7.3... while that may seem ancient, remember 8.0 came out in 2002! Support for 7.3 and the ability (apart from mirrors that still exist) to get ISOs ended December 2003.
SUSE has provided a mechansim by which their software can be downloaded... perhaps not as convenient as ISOs for some, but you can always get ISOs from your local LUG... I'm sure that someone there will burn you a set for free.
Now, SuSE has the chance to actually gain marketshare against RedHat and force them to work harder on Fedora.
SUSE actually has more marketshare than you realize. Do you not know that over 90% of large scale enterprise deployments occur using SUSE?? Why? Because Red Hat was VERY, VERY late to the game when it came to supporting things like the mainframe.
When IBM was looking for vendor distribution support for the mainframe, SUSE dropped them a release on their doorstep. Red Hat came armed with contracts and "deals" (before they would even consider supporting the platform).
Which enterprise dist was first to provide logical volume support? Dynamically resizeable live file system support? A graphical and TEXT(!) based administration utility? Key integrated Unix features like NIS and NFS? Even LDAP? ...
Then ask, what enterprise dist was first to provide an unreleased private fork of GCC and its libraries, graphical-only administration tools (e.g. just like Windows requires a graphical head...), numerous kernel hacks that were not well tested, an NIS subsystem and automounter that is not well behaved or integrated,
SUSE's motto is "Have a lot of fun!". Now... we can all argue that having a lot of fun doesn't put bread on the table... but the guys sure are motivated when it comes to trying to their best to come out with solid technology that's easy to use.
IMHO, Novell brings the typical American business angle to SUSE (now they can be just like Red Hat). While some might argue that Red Hat is the most pro open source company out there... remember they also have vigorously protected their trademark (there's a whole story on that... but too long to write about here) to prevent those "free" CD's from bearing Red Hat's name. In many ways, Red Hat has shown more old-style IP protectionism than people realize. They're just a whole lot slicker (stealthier) about how they do it.
I liked SUSE better as a private company. However, IBM needs a real enterprise level player to help them provide enterprise level solutions... so you can kind of blame IBM for the whole Novell acquisition thing.. it brings a large scale support arm (that dwarfs Red Hat) and the flexibility of SUSE which has always had a better Unix integration philosophy (Red Hat is a GNU/Linux dist, SUSE is a GNU/Linux dist with the experience of former large scale enterprise Unix types).
Anyone who has been in the industry can tell you that Red Hat tends to have a "if it's not Linux, then it sucks" attitude. SUSE tends to have a "hey if we change this a bit, we'll integrate better with existing Unix systems" attitude. Now, which style is more enterprise focused??
With that said, Red Hat was the first publically traded American based Linux dist. Being publically traded goes a LONG way with American businesses (you protect my tail, I'll protect yours). It's easier to make "deals" when you are dealing with a public company. It's a "safer" business situation for large enterprises (sort of a good ole boy system). Anyone who has help take a company from private to public can fill in the details about what I mean there.
Well.. now there's Novell/SUSE. But the problem is that large enterprises got somewhat burnt by Novell in the past (doesn't matter if it's just perception... perception is all that matters). So, now businesses will choos
SuSE was better some time ago... (Score:3, Informative)
Now I see an unpleasant tendency of including prerelease software in SuSE. As far as I remember, they were shipping a prerelease gcc 3.3, which caused problems with my (in-house) project and some prerelease of X11. Overall quality of the distro degraded. Also, I just don't get why they have Qt compiled with -DQT_NO_STL. As result, C++ programs that use STL have problems with system's Qt/KDE. This doesn't save memory/improve performance/etc., gcc shipped with SuSE has no problems with STL - so why?
I don't know whether SuSE is improving or getting worse now, as I'm currently deeply buried in .NET brain damage stuff. But next time when I'll be able to work under Linux most of time, I think I'll switch to something like Gentoo.
Re:SuSE was better some time ago... (Score:2)
I didn't experience this, cause I upgraded straight from 7.x to 9.1, which has a fairly standard gcc 3.3.3.
Suse is nice (Score:5, Informative)
Looks aside, I think YaST is one of the most useful configurator/installers/admin panels I have ever used.
The downsides of 9.1 are its wireless tools (I have a broadcom chip, so I had to use ndiswrapper... switching between networks required admin commandline work.) The other problem, which is a problem with many linux distro's but still hasn't been addressed for my situation, is ACPI. Yes I use a laptop. No, Suse did not pander to me with easy to install packages... meanwhile, it did install at least 4 different packages for bluetooth, which is one thing I don't use.
In general, though, I would tell anyone to give it a try.
Re:Suse is nice (Score:2, Interesting)
Strange though... Two years ago I could reccommend at least five distros to people. These days it is either FC or SuSE. I won't reccommend Gento
Re:Suse is nice (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Suse is nice (Score:2)
Latest? (Score:2, Interesting)
Anyway, lets hope this release has more than half-hearted GNOME support. The previous version included GNOME, but barely. It's going to be interesting to see how Novell balances KDE and GNOME in the future, given their conflict.
Re:Latest? (Score:2)
I'd rather hope they spend at least that long testing the entire platform they've put together for stability before releasing it.
OTOH, SuSE has been a very KDE-centric distribution for a long time. I don't suspect it'll have changed much with this release.
Re:Latest? (Score:2)
Re:Latest? (Score:2)
Re:Latest? (Score:2)
Huh? the latest gcc is 3.4.2 (a month old), but the 3.4 series have been out for a while now (since April) - and with improvements on
suse reflections (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:suse reflections (Score:2)
Some people (like uberjoe) think SuSE is too easy to use and on the other hand there are always people hammering on about "when will linux be ready for the desktop?".
What's a distro to do?
I use SuSE on my workstation, as I want an OS that *works* - and I like KDE.
I'm starting to set up a server box for the fun/learning factor and I'll probably go for gentoo.
I might even try debian or BSD, even if it is dying...
BTW In older ver
Outlook server? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Outlook server? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Outlook server? (Score:2)
What's advanced here? (Score:5, Interesting)
I had high hopes of Novell buying SuSe only to see not much being done with it. Patches to broken applications if made available need to be recompiled in a timely manner and be available to the users. Telling a customer to find it on the web is the wrong answer.
So close! When will we get the perfect SME-server? (Score:3, Informative)
I'd been running samba/samba-tng network for the last 4/5 years on different distros but I have yet to see a distro that makes it easy to set up a basic serversetup for a small business network (dhcp,bind,samba and nfs) without having to use the commandline +++.
The shocker is how close SuSE is to achieving this in 9.1 - but that they didn't bother to go the last mile.
This would make it a kickass product for many SMEs.
As of 9.1 the following things are missing:
The press release says that they have adressed these issues (aehm, it says a redesigned user interface to permit easier setup of SAMBA, DNS and DHCP servers whatever that means), let's hope they have.
Notice They're Using Bleeding-Edge X.Org (Score:5, Interesting)
So does this mean SuSE is going to be one of the first "user-friendly" distros to offer OSX-esque eye-candy like drop-shadows and transparency?
Kontact's Connectivity (Score:3, Informative)
Network mounting netware filesystems natively (Score:2, Interesting)
But how well does it integrate with Novell's own products?
For example, can SUSE 9.2 network mount a Netware volume? Or do we have to use Novell's 'native file access' and export it using SMB (ugh)?
Also, if we can mount Netware volumes, can we do anything significant with them? E.g., can we set rights?
Is ConsoleOne actually working (with all the plug-ins we have under Windows) with SUSE 9.2?
I'd be pleased to hear that all these things were possibl
I, for one, (Score:5, Funny)
Dang... (Score:2)
Although I havent had a chance to really play with it and they aren't accepting orders anymore, it's really an interesting display of what Novell has to bring to the table as far as SuSE and their other products are concerned
Well, there's always this weekend if I don't suddenly get a life
now I can wait on my failed 9.0 = 9.1 upgrade (Score:3, Informative)
Basically, the upgrade failed (and left my system in a partially upgraded state, requiring me to restore from backup tapes) due to some internal error. Yes, I have an older system (dual Celeron 500's). Red Hast was happy on it before the upgrade to SuSE 9.0, though.
Since I purchased the professional, I figured I'd get support. Not so. I was told, because of the error I got, I had to do a "manual upgrade", but that's not covered by professional support. And, I had to wait weeks to be told this. Perhaps it was the language barrier.
Since the system involved is fairly critical, I deicded to leave it at 9.0. I'm a little wary now of SuSE.
I knew this was coming! (Score:5, Interesting)
From what I've seen of 9.1, though, it's maturing rapidly - and that's got to be good. Personally, I use it mainly on a VM under Virtual PC on my PowerBook. Performance is surprisingly good, and much better than XP under the same environment (with all the XP eye candy turned off). I also run it on a PC VMware VM, where it behaves well, and so on.
I do think the two releases per year target is kind of arbitrary and silly for the most part, though. Novell/SuSE should be concentrating on supporting and updating the existing release over a year or so, and then release a new version when enough spiffy new stuff is out there to justify it. Other than Bluetooth support, improved wireless, and some new apps I don't see a lot of real justification for this version.
Nvu? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Wonder what volume pricing is (Score:2)
For a fairer comparasion, given the number of tools that ship with SuSE, you'd need to add in the volume cost of Microsoft Office, Visual Studio, and the like. However some of the tools shipped with SuSE are less fully featured or standards-compatible than the Microsoft/Windows equivalents so you can't necessarily consider Kdevelop and Anjuta to have the same dollar value as Visual Studio (which
Re:Wonder what volume pricing is (Score:2)
Re:Wonder what volume pricing is (Score:2)
You might want to clarify that you're talking about the per-cost seat of SUPPORT. The per-cost seat of PURCHASE is the price of one SUSE Professional box, divided by the number of workstations you're going to install it on.
Max
Re:Nvu - wowee (Score:2)
Re:I hope they've fixed... (Score:2)
Re:GNOME 2.8? (Score:2)