SuSE Announces More Layoffs 136
jdfox writes: "SuSE announced more layoffs on Friday: 10% reductions in Germany, or about 50 (mainly non-technical) staff. This follows the February layoffs of 30 out of the 45 US staff in Oakland. Perhaps a merger with MandrakeSoft is in order? Both are RPM-based, both offer KDE-based admin tools. OTOH, as MandrakeSoft is right in the middle of an IPO, it might not be the best time to be thinking about a major acquisition. I mainly use Debian, but SuSE is an excellent distro, and I would hate to see the company go bust."
No thank you (Score:1)
Why are there trees on the Champs Elysees? (Score:1)
Re:KDE based admin tools? (Score:1)
Re:FUCK OFF BITCH (Score:1)
Sure, the Linux kiddies are annoying, but I'd say that the biggest problem with Linux is the GPL. Pretty much ensures that all these companies will continue to lose money.
a lot more than 4 browsers! :) (Score:1)
konqueror
links, lynx
mozilla
netscape (hey, I just installed 4.78, hasn't crashed in the 30 seconds it's been up
skpstone
... and a passel of others, too
Re:It's the logo STUPID!!!! (Score:1)
Penguins need lizards, because the penguins just don't know what kind of hat to wear with the chic tuxedos, black, white or red.
SuSe will tell him, it really doesn't matter. :-)
You can't cuddle with a penguin. You always think he is wet, cold and too slick, even if he kinda looks cute. Besides penguins get too exited en masse. Well, penguins are kind of cute though too, especially their eyes and the tuxedo really makes their belly so much more adorable.
So, I think, penguins and lizards make an excellent couple, but as you know they are different, penguins and lizards, or do you think women and men are alike ?
Aside from that, in Germany it's not necessary to be a big company, it's good enough to be a good company. I hope they make it.
They should come out with the equivalent of the RH's professional server together with their new firewall CD and sell it at a higher price in the U.S. RH's professional server is so much more expensive here in the U.S. that they can afford to raise their prices and compete. The stupidity on both sides is that they so much divide their out-of-the box installs into workstation and server etc. Why ? Nobody will just remain with their Linux box at a workstation level. Everybody would like to run their home-based servers and network like the pros after a while. I don't get it.
It's the logo STUPID!!!! (Score:2)
The SuSE Yast: good and bad bits (Score:2)
I keep looking at new RH releases, but the one thing I like SuSE for is -ironically- one aspect of YAST: the complete package integration. I have _one_ CD I insert, and I can choose from all the packages in the distro. RH lacks the integration, their idea of a 'Pro' pack is to throw in some more CDs and a manual - it's up to you to figure out what you've got and on which CD it lives (the only way out is to use the DVD instead, but that's not always practical).
And manuals - the contents makes you forgive the occasional translation slips (stray bits of German throughout). RH is quite good - but I feel SuSE beats them by being complete. And it usually works
They should really merge with Caldera (Score:2)
Their technical expertise and quality of their distribution is closest to Caldera. As well with geographical location - Caldera and Suse engineering are about a 12 minute train ride apart in Germany. I have a lot of respect for both distributions in their focus on quality. The Caldera and Suse engineers actualy have quite a bit of mutual respect for each other and get along quite well (from very good sources). They are also both focussed on making the LSB a major force in the Linux world wich is a very good thing.
Mandrake and SuSe can't merge (Score:2)
There are too much philosophical gaps between those 2 companies. I bet lot's of Mandrake developers would leave the company if they were told to work for SuSe.
That is correct (Score:4)
Re:Oracle / SuSE (Score:1)
What exactly happened between RedHat & Oracle? (Score:3)
I heard some rumor about Oracle pushing an ERP solution at RedHat that involved WinNT, which started the bad blood between them.
Then, out comes RedHat Database, which would surely cause Oracle some displeasure even if it is no competetive threat.
Perhaps even a larger concern is Suse's use of ReiserFS. Red Hat has been screaming that fsck and other user-level tools for ReiserFS are tremendously substandard, and that ReiserFS corrupts itself under heavy load, to say nothing of the NFS problems (I don't know if these are fixed).
(Gee it would be nice to know which JFS RedHat is going to choose before I install any more XFS versions - perhaps it really will be ext3 after all.)
Why is Oracle coming to a different conclusion about ReiserFS? Granted, it's not that hard to restore a corrupted Oracle data file, but why have any question of risk?
There is more here than meets the eye.
Re:No thank you (Score:1)
Re:or... (Score:2)
he could have just accidently hit the o before the r :)
No chance. He was going for that zany ESR-loving hacker jargon file [tuxedo.org] stylee..
Ah, I see my original post was marked "Overrated". The coward's moderation. If you think I'm trolling, call me a goddamn troll.
Re:Oracle / SuSE (Score:1)
--
Michael Hasenstein
http://www.suse.de/~mha/
Re:Oracle / SuSE (Score:2)
SuSE Oracle support page is
http://www.suse.com/en/support/oracle/<p>
See the LVM whitepaper there for some interesting SuSE-only things (although it's all opensource (GPL) stuff).
--
Michael Hasenstein
http://www.suse.de/~mha/
Re:Oracle / SuSE (Score:1)
Oops, I meant that Linux/Intel is one that is still supported.
Re:Oracle / SuSE (Score:2)
The original comment was correct and you are both wrong. For Oracle 9i, only SuSE is supported.
Also the idea of Oracle buying SuSE does make some sense. Oracle has seriously chopped down the number of future supported platforms and Linux/Intel is one of them.
Don't worry too much (Score:3)
Merging with Mandrake is a ridiculous proposition and it's incredibly bad behaviour of a journalist (or someone acting in this role) to suggest something like this.
Bo Thorsen.
Disclaimer: I work for SuSE Labs, but I speak for myself.
Re:You might want to reconsider that (Score:3)
It's not clear to me that the original poster was talking about gcc-2.96. If I'm not mistaken, Mandrake has used things like pgcc in the past.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Oracle / SuSE (Score:1)
(http://platforms.oracle.com/linux)
Please check your facts, never mind this is
;)
Re:KDE based admin tools? (Score:1)
Re:Buyout could be good (Score:1)
The truth is, the American product comes out on top.
That is, exposure is worth more than quality.
Which doesn't mean that quality is unimportant. But in my experience, the difference between Redhat and SuSE is less significant than the difference between two SuSE or Redhat releases.
About 70 people? (Score:3)
70 expendable workers? You just can't throw workers at a problem and expect everything to just organize. This is why so many companies tank.
Of course, I'm sure Slackware would have been getting along a lot _more_ nicely had they not put their store on a very slow ASDL line when their new release was announced on slashdot...
That's just dumb. It was bogged down for like 3 days, and even now it's very slow.
Slackware Store [slackware.com]
You obviously didn't read the license (Score:2)
I hate it when Slashdotters don't read licenses. Most haven't even read the GPL and go around telling untruths about it.
*sigh*
Re:Mandrake and SuSe can't merge (Score:2)
I had no trouble downloading ISOs for Alpha.
I also had no trouble downloading a single floppy disk and installing SuSE directly from ftp.suse.com. It's a hell of a lot quicker than downloading the entire thing, including stuff you don't want, then burning 7 CDs, then switching them during each install.
If you want, download the FTP installation tree and stick it somewhere on a networked computer. Then you can do FTP installs *really* quickly. If you have a 100Mb network, it's a lot faster than a 7 CDROMs.
As for the *proprietary* nature of YaST, I recommend a reading of the license. The only thing you can't do is resell it. Big deal. I can still modify it if I want. Isn't that the *real* point?
Re:Debian (Score:1)
How's that for a contradiction? unchanging <-> up-to-date
Re:SuSE not Free (Score:2)
If you don't want to use SuSE then don't - there's room in the Linux world for more than one distro, and SuSE is extremely popular for good reason.
Go try RedHat, Mandrake, Debian, Slackware, SuSE then come back and tell me with a straight face that they all provided the same bang for the buck to you, and were all of equal quality, etc.
Re:acquisitions (Mandrake sucks) (Score:1)
there are alot of people on slashdot that bash other distros. i personally think the only people who have an opinion that matters is someone who creates a distro. a person who creates and maintains a distro has an understanding of what that process is like and can make an informed decision on what is and is not utter CRAP. so mandrake didnt work out for you, thats nice. i really dont think they want people like yourself as a customer. personally i would prefer customers with level heads and a little reason.
use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that
acquisitions (Score:4)
use LaTeX? want an online reference manager that
Re:SuSE merge with The FRENCH? (Score:1)
Why is this US based website, so goddamn USCENTRIC? Well Ill be darned.., TWO distro's in Europe?? One is in money probs? Well certainly one distro is enough! Let them merge! They probably both are eurobabble localized anyways!
It seems much more rationale from codebase POV to merge Mandrake and RedHat or.. or.. SuSe and Slackware.. or or RedHat and Suse...
Anyways, mergers are never a solution to afloat a sinking ship again (not to say that SuSe is sinking.. Its just not a way to SAVE a sinking ship)
Greetz Richard
Re:No thank you (Score:1)
It was about releasing it too early AGAINST the wishes of the maintainers.
Gr
Re:Should I be worried about this? (Score:1)
Gr
Want SuSE to succeed? (Score:2)
I recently bought the personal version of 7.2 - to use to update my 6.3 box. Being a relative newbie on Linux, I had my doubts and "fears" on doing the update (after all, it was a major version upgrade). I wasn't sure the update would work properly, or that something would break after reboot, or what...
I figured something would go wrong - how could it go smooth?
But you know something - it did! The update worked great - no problems at all. Reboot happened and everything was fine...
Ok, not everything was fine - everything worked and appeared OK - but I found that X4.0 hadn't replaced the old X, though KDE updated fine. The kernel didn't get updated either (that was my own fault, in a way - earlier I had patched my 2.2.13 kernal, that comes standard with SuSE 6.3, to 2.2.14, to fix a bug with the parallel port zip drive. I had placed the vmlinuz in
Even so, with all that - I am highly pleased with the results. I have updated a lot of my software, and KDE2 is a joy to use and see. I have a love/hate relationship with the NVidia drivers for my TNT card now (I was using the "reference" source drivers - or whatever they were - under X3 - but they don't work for 4) - they are faster, but I hate that damn logo - anybody know how to get rid of it (the only reference I found was something involving a hex edit patching of a binary - not something I really want to do).
I am really pleased. I loved the update so much, I really want to see how/what a virgin install is like, on a brand new system. Something tells me "simple as pie"...
Worldcom [worldcom.com] - Generation Duh!
Re:No thank you (Score:2)
I use LFS [linuxfromscratch.org] at home as you can build the lightest, fastest system that way (and it's not that big a deal if I screw something up on my own boxen), but I wouldn't consider anything other than SuSE for a business system. I've used SLS and Slackware in the past, I have Debian on an old Mac as it's the only game in town, and I appear to be stuck with Redh*t at work (until I take over as sysadmin, at least). From what I've seen, SuSE beats them all.
Re:Market is balancing itself out (Score:1)
Don't forget about the GPL. Thanks to it, prices can never skyrocket.. at least for the software. No matter how you get a copy (of the freely redistributable versions), you are free to redistribute copies and charge however much (or little) as you wish. The software will always be free. Which brings me to what I wanted to talk about anyway. Services.
I work for IBM e-business. IBM Global Services has always added value for customers with service offerings. Now by strongly embracing Linux, we can sell our own hardware, charge an install fee for a free OS, and optionally sell our own non-free Linux software. The big gain is in the services. From what I understand, RedHat now sells multimillion dollar support contracts. They may even turn a real profit within a year or so. They "get" Linux. You can make a little money selling CDs, a little more building a better distro, or a lot more providing consulting services.
--
Steve Jackson
Re:SuSE not Free (Score:1)
Re:About 70 people? (Score:2)
SuSe needs a lot more people than Slackware because they do more.
Re:So this is why unemployment is such an issue th (Score:1)
Re:So this is why unemployment is such an issue th (Score:1)
Read the Interview (Score:4)
Re:Should I be worried about this? (Score:1)
You also shot yourself in the foot. I mentioned the growing success of LInux Office applications, and then you tried to slam Linux by stating that it is not a productive platform. The fact that we have more and more Office apps proves that more and more people can be productive with it.
What can I do with Linux that I can't do with Windows? How bout go a week without rebooting my box? Since we're talking browsers, how bout printing web pages to postscript files, and then using a simple script to turn them into PDF files? I can do that for free in Linux; I would have to buy Acrobat to do that in Windows.
And lastly MS IE integration. Again, you proved my point: in Windows, you have the "choice" of pretty much one browser. The options are much better in the OSS world.
Should I be worried about this? (Score:2)
That said, Linux has never looked stronger. We now have FOUR browsers - Netscape, Mozilla, Galeon, and Konqueror. Plus plenty of Office apps. And I recently read another atricle that shows how Linux is taking over the graphics-workstation desktop (at Pixar, etc).
I can only hope that the current decline in the vitality of OSS companies is parallel to that of the entire tech industry, and nothing more.
Anyone have any input on this?
Re:Oracle / SuSE (Score:1)
Does that sentence mean:
1. Linux / Intel is one of the chopped down platforms?
2. Linux / Intel is one of the supported platforms?
Re:Both are RPM-based (Score:2)
I should damn well hope so. RPM 3.05 has been the Linux Standard base method of installing software for some time now, and at least 98% of production systems are RPM based according to Netcraft. Hence I doubt that's the basis to merge.
Re:Should I be worried about this? (Score:2)
Red Hat's stocks were overinflated, but the company is profitable and going well. VAs stocks deserve to be down - the company replaced a business model which was established (they supplied Akamai) and understandable with one that will see them go out of business real soon.
I also heard a rumor (I think over at Linux magazine) that Redhat et al. are about to start charging per-CPU licenses.
Not sure who you mean by (et al), but Red Hat is not and will never charge per seat licenses for their OS, and have said so repeatedly in th epast. You're probably thinking of Caldera, whose move to per seat Licensing for Workstation / Server 3.0 involves per seat licensing (and who prompted Red Hat's statement on the topic)
Add to this that SGI recently laid off a lot of its (XFS!) staff
Some of the XFS staff - just a couple of members. The project is till going stong AFAICT.
That said, Linux has never looked stronger. We now have FOUR browsers - Netscape, Mozilla, Galeon, and Konqueror.
Plus plenty of Office apps.
StarOffice can't do a word count on a selection of words. It can't add multiple rows to its spreadsheet when needed. It uses its own bizarre font system, and like Mozillas own fatal mistake, it uses its own UI toolkit. All these thigs will take a very, very long time to fix.
Most of the other office apps aren't finished or are less feature complete than StarOffice. Corel is unusable (if you can install it), Applix is odd, and AbiWord ain't done.
For those of us who used Netscape 4.x to read our mail, Mozilla 0.9x is a failure. XUL makes this nearly impossible, its that slow (yes, I have a variety of PIIs and Athlons with at least 128Mb of RAM and its unusably slow on all of them).
And I recently read another atricle that shows how Linux is taking over the graphics-workstation desktop (at Pixar, etc).
Indeed. Historically it's mostly been for batch rendering and compositing, but its nice to see it changing.
Re:Don't worry too much (Score:1)
I submitted the story; timothy posted it. I certainly meant no harm to SuSE, nor was I attempting to act as a journalist (shudder). Rather, I would like to see a large, pan-European distro vendor which can compete effectively with Red Hat, offer large-scale retail supply and support of a superior product into North America, and maintain the lead in Europe that Mandrake and SuSE currently enjoy.
May I ask why a merger with Mandrake is a ridiculous proposition? As a SuSE employee you might know something I don't about the distros. Are you referring to a technical problem or a cultural one? Or both? Or something else?
Re:They should really merge with Caldera (Score:1)
A few choice bits of vintage RL:
Ransom thinks Linux is proprietary [slashdot.org]
Ransom thinks Microsoft is right about the GPL [slashdot.org]
Re:RedHat = The MS of the free world (Score:1)
Too European? For whom? Americans? Quel horreur! I think we can live with that. Linux is a European operating system, and now getting very popular in the rest of the world. Here in Europe we are more than happy to buy it from a European vendor, but more to the point it is a better product than Red Hat. If I wanted an inferior product just for the sheer thrill of buying from a US company, I'd buy Windows.
SuSE's business model (Score:2)
I also have a flyer I got in the mail from SuSE (because I registered my 7.1) urging me to buy 7.2, and listing some of their other products. They have a $2500 Lotus Domino + SuSE package they sell (amongst other expensive products) and I imagine that if they can sell plenty of these to corporate customers then they probably won't be hurting too bad.
Many of the posts have been "Imminent Death of SuSE predicted!" posts. I think it is very silly to suggest that they are going to go under or have to merge. I think they have a very strong user base and I bet they'll come out fine.
GPL keeps linux free (Score:1)
Actually it is impossible for a monopoly to control Linux or any other GPL software. The GPL is written in such a way to prevent this from ever happenning. In order for Linux to become a monopoly you would have to have every one of the 6 billion people on earth refuse to download source and compile and redistribute it. And all of those separate GPL projects to instantly halt their work and stop distributing binaries from places like sourceforge and freshmeat. For something like that to happen we would be talking about the destruction of the internet or Americanisation of every person on earth (making people stupid one commercial at a time). See linux is a truely free market. So do what you want, just remember to give back to the community, because that is what it is all really about. Money is worthless.
Don't believe me? Look at what linux has accomplished in the last few years. Do you honestly think that has anything to do with money? It is the hard work of hundreds or thousands of developers, users, sys admins, and now finally the old school management and marketting types (because it is where the money will be). Unfortunately for the old school management and marketting types are finding it hard playing in a free market without walls of IP or legalese to protect them. But that's not my problem. I just hope one day these people will reallize that life is the only thing of value in our world.
KDE based admin tools? (Score:4)
Re:Oracle / SuSE (Score:1)
They are spending a lot of time and money on SuSE, and I tend to think that Oracle won't just throw that away.
$0.02 (CND)
Re:The best workstation distro I've used (Score:2)
SuSE is great.
At work the Linux boxes generally get Redhat, so I get an opportunity to experience RH's default Gnome install there.
At home, my first RH 4.2 install has been giving way to several revisions of SuSE, lately 7.1 Professional.
SuSE's default distro is nice since:
Finally, I actually buy real distros at full cost instead of iso image copies, since I like to support RH and SuSE, both of which have contributed significantly to the open software community in various ways. That RH employs Alan Cox and that SuSE writes paychecks for Andrea Arcangeli means I will continue to buy distros from both of those houses.
Re:What exactly happened between RedHat & Oracle? (Score:2)
7.2 ISO (Score:1)
--
Re:7.2 ISO (Score:2)
--
I doubt... (Score:1)
Re:who cares (Score:1)
Responsibility is essentially ours .. (Score:1)
Evolution (Score:1)
My personal pull is with the same spiral motion that is the formative energy for most everything else. <insert Debian logo here>
The Roaring Spring
-shpoffo
Re:SuSE not Free (Score:1)
I'd be happy to, but I'm not going to spend over a hundred bucks ($30-$40 per distro) for boxed sets of each one. Hence, I download and burn RH, Mandrake and Debian, to try them out. I liked Mandrake the best (Debian wouldn't support booting past the 1024th cylinder, and Red Hat has no journaling filesystem) so I donated $30.
If SuSE would likewise let me try their distro free, maybe I'd like it, but I'm not going to go out and waste money when Mandrake's working just fine. Correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't believe that their FTP version supports PPPoE.
The only "intuitive" interface is the nipple. After that, it's all learned.
Not all SuSE software is GPLed! (Score:2)
The only "intuitive" interface is the nipple. After that, it's all learned.
SuSE not Free (Score:4)
Red Hat always takes a lot of crap for being "sell outs," but SuSE is the only distro company that has ever restricted redistribution. I don't understand why they don't take more crap for that. I, for one, will not be sad if SuSE goes under.
The only "intuitive" interface is the nipple. After that, it's all learned.
Re:Oracle / SuSE (Score:1)
So maybe you should check [suse.com] before you flame
Re:So this is why unemployment is such an issue th (Score:1)
So they had somehow to compensate the churches. They did that by making treaties guaranteeing certain rights and privileges. One of these is the collection of church taxes.
This of course goes both ways. No catholic bishop, for instance, can be instituted without the blessing of the governor/governing mayor of the respective state.
So, just get used to it. It's not bad, it's just
f.
Re:So this is why unemployment is such an issue th (Score:1)
So, running a medium or large company gets you to cultivate a cooperative culture with the employees anyway. That contributes muich to the often quoted "social peace" which is actually an advantage of many Geman companies.
f.
Re:So this is why unemployment is such an issue th (Score:1)
The key word, of course, is cooperation. Companies that are constantly in fights with their employees create themselves a living hell short time, and tend to fail in the long run.
f.
Re:So this is why unemployment is such an issue th (Score:1)
Now it gets funny. Good morning, people paid for that. It's called unemployment insurance, it's mandatory, and you paid it, too. Go have a look at your salary statement. Now they are unemployed they collect their insurance. There's reason behind that - landlords don't give discounts once you are unemployed...
f.
Layoffs in Germany (Score:5)
First, have a look at their web site. They announce to reduce headcounts in a socially acceptable way and in close cooperation with the empolyee's council (which for all practical means can here be compared to a union).
Announcing this now means that - if they are really fast in the HR department - they get contract terminations out this month. More likely it will be next month, since every single termination (or the whole package with all details) has to be agreed by the employee's council.
Since people here have usually 3 months notice on termination in their contracts (and, especially in the tech sector, 6 is not uncommon) thus the affected people will regularily have to leave earliest end of october of november.
But that's not all - an employee's council worth its name will ususally get a substantial severance package for anybody terminated. I'd be surprised if they didn't get at least an additional 2 or 3 month's pay as compensation.
Now, what does that all mean ?
First, expect noone to fall harshly into poverty anytime soon.
Second, Suse will probably not save a single dime this year by doing this. All they do is proactively reducing next year's cost (and, maybe, impress some analysts). So this is not, IMO a sudden panic measure but an act of careful planning for times getting harsher.
f.
Re:No thank you (Score:2)
Nothing besides the fact that it's not open-source. And I don't mean the "FSF definition of open-source", but the fact that you can't get the source for yast. Now, is it just me, or does someone else find it odd that open-source distribution would use a proprietary installer?
I liked SuSE until I found out that 7.0 shipped with a broken software raid. Now that's just wrong.
Ridiculous proposition? Agreed! (Score:1)
The
Thank you also, for clearing things up. I love SuSE, and hope to find myself walking to the local store to pick up the latest copy of SuSE even 20 years from now.
Debian (Score:2)
(Well, okay, there are many other neat things about Debian, but this is one of them)
-- Agthorr
SuSE is well S/N real bad on this thread/ (Score:3)
#35: Voice of moderation, mostly non technical staff gets layed off. (portal.suse.de/en)
#60: Socially acceptable lay offs that don't save SuSE any money immedeately.
#80: "Just restructuring a bit", "going strong" from an employee of SuSE Labs
#118: SuSE is not publicly traded. Privately
funded. Was profitable from the beginning
and maybe grew a little too fastduring the
tech bubble.
The rest, were just doom'n'gloom sayers...
Come on, people. Not everything is going down hill. Some companys have a sound structure.
SuSE is not only in the distribution business, the do a lot of service to and have more products than "just" the distribution and stuffed animals.
Marcus
Is this reallly that shocking? (Score:2)
However, this news can't be all that shocking. Countless numbers of companies - small one-officed
-Do or do not. There is no try.
Oracle / SuSE (Score:4)
Re:KDE based admin tools? (Score:2)
Re:Noooo!!!! (Score:2)
Hacker: A criminal who breaks into computer systems
Re:Read the Interview (Score:2)
I have to say as a KDE user, I'm shocked! Suse certainly packages KDE well and everything is intergraded in to the control panel perfectly, much impressed. I never knew there was a distro that pays even more attention to the desktop than Mandrake.
Difference between Suse and Mandrake (Score:2)
I don't know what the people at Suse think about that idea, but I do know that Mandrake consists of Free/GNU software. It's free to download. And they want to keep it that way. Over the last few years Suse has slowly been moving into proprietary software. Yast and Yast2 are under non-free licenses, or at least, you're not free to resell it, it's non-GNU.
I don't know the license of their email-server, but i assume that's also non-GNU.
MandrakeSoft is not interested in non-GNU software.
I'm not planning on a flamewar between licenses, but it does matter under which license software is being shipped.
SuSE 7.2 is superb, well worth supporting (Score:2)
With 7.2, you get nice TrueType font support, autodetection of IDE CDR writers, good USB support, and a really simple install.
Anyway, we all vote with our wallets, and as someone who used to spend a small fortune every year buying software at EggHead, CompUSA, etc., paying for a $30 distro evry 6-9 months, and the occasional small donations to FSF and Debian is way less expensive, and generally feels better.
-- Mark Watson -- Open Source and Content at www.markwatson.com
I don't Understand. (Score:2)
Ever looked at portal.suse.com? (Score:4)
But no-one seems to mention it much, which is unfortunate.
http://portal.suse.de/en/
Check it out
StarTux
Re:It's the logo STUPID!!!! (Score:2)
Drat-- now we will have to sack Tux.... If no one takes a Lizard seriously, what will they think of a Penguin??
Sig: Tell all your friends NOT to download the Advanced Ebook Processor:
Re:SuSE 7.2 is superb, well worth supporting (Score:2)
I thoroughly enjoy both RH7.1 and SuSE 7.1. I don't expect them to go under (at this point).
OTOH, Caldera.... (stock price went below $1 this last Fri. and they are being sued by stockholders...)
Sig: Tell all your friends NOT to download the Advanced Ebook Processor:
CFO becomes CEO (Score:4)
Presumably this means that SuSe will now concentrate on actually making money rather than just making a distro.
Tim
Re:The SuSE Yast: good and bad bits (Score:2)
Mandrake does this too: a question in the installer is: which of these CDs do you have? It then presents a package list based on your answer.
Re:Should I be worried about this? (Score:2)
Not to mention the best of them all: Opera...
Re:Difference between Suse and Mandrake (Score:2)
Re: Layoffs != Going downhill (Score:3)
As we well know, in todays competitive environment, a company has to adapt. I have seen in the past companies improving the quality of their products after a layoff. How can we outsiders tell what these layoffs represent ? We simply can't.
We really don't know what kind of people are being kicked off. How can we be sure that they were not getting the the way ? Or maybe SuSe just plans to handle some positions to third party companies, which is not always a good thing, but is not always bad either.
A think people that see these layoffs as a bad sign are a little ahead of themselves. We should wait and see what happens.
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Buyout could be good (Score:2)
So, what's left at the end of this? Less distributions. As less popular (or less well-funded) distributions go under or get bought out, the Linux distributions begin to look more alike. A standard emerges for the distributions. The superior product comes out on top. A product that the consumers have voted on (with dollars) as the product that has the features they want, the tools they want, the support they want, the
resources they want, etc. The Linux market has behaved like every other free market.
Us slashdotters seem to be the free market types. No interference, may the best distribution win. So SuSE is hurting right now. The market doesn't lie, so it seems to imply people are looking elsewhere. I believe this is good for Linux overall. Linux companies have to compete like real companies, develop a superior product, and offer their customers more. Maybe SuSE will come out on top in the end, or perhaps not. But if SuSE takes a buyout from another Linux manufacture and the result is one less distribution (which will hopefully combine the best aspects of both systems), I believe the Linux community is benefited. The end result of this will tend towards a Linux distribution for the masses, which is exactly what the open source advocacy really needs.
SuSE 7.2 rocks my world (Score:2)
Re:So this is why unemployment is such an issue th (Score:3)
Well,
the real trouble (in Germany) is, if I got the stories right, _not_ the fact that companies don't want to hire people. People don't want to get their hands dirty. Why? Consider you get about 500 DM cash on hand a month, housing support (up to paying your entire appartment w/heating and all the works), reduced telephone rates, reduced prices for a lot of stuff you buy, "Kleidergeld" (money to by clothes) every two months. For what? Being registered as unemployed in Germany (it actually is much higher for some time after you loose your old job). Plus, do some "unofficial" work here and there, if you do it well, add another 1000,- a month. As I said, no taxes. If you are married, and/or have children, of course you get more.
Now do the math: How much would I have to earn pre-tax to sustain the same level of quality of life? Well, you'll easily come to figures around 2500-3000 DM, if it's enough. That means you're working full time and you, after all is deducted, don't have a penny more in your pocket than if you wouldn't work at all. Thank you.
BTW: Im paying taxes here. Not nice. 50% goes off to the state.
Anno.
RedHat = The MS of the free world (Score:2)
When one says Linux, he thinks RedHat.
To be more than just an underground Distro, you've got to make money, have a company, like RedHat. They posted a Profit! Sure, I'm sure they'll do some layoffs, but they're doing pretty well.
i've heard some call them the MS of Linux, they might be similar in some ways. But until Microsoft LinuXP comes out in a year or two, RedHat will be on top of the market.
Don't believe me about Microsoft preparing it's own Linux? Why would it be 'porting'
Zoot!
Does TurboLinux still have that crap text based installer? That's what buried that thing, along with poor advertising.
Suse? Green stinks, and it's too European, too German.
IBM needs to make eLinux or something....they could take this thing, but they're scared it'll ruin their AS/400 and OS/390 business. They could bury MS for once and for all!
Mandrake is nice, but it's really just RH with some glitter.
Debian? Slack? Nerds only!
We all seen what happened to Corel, no need for comment...
Storm? Gone.
Caldera was alright, but who knows what happened over there. They merged with SCO which was a laugh too.
The best workstation distro I've used (Score:4)
Market is balancing itself out (Score:4)
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Re:Layoffs in Germany (Score:2)
This is of course a good thing, but seriously, what else would you expect them to announce? And don't forget that they're essentially still firing those people, most of the "playing nice" is required by German law anyway.
Well, it's probably both. I think Suse is just another of the companies that wanted to grow too fast during the new economy and Linux hype, and now they are realizing it didn't work, and won't work anytime soon.
My guess is that they are in financial trouble. Not bankrupt, but in trouble. They were planning an IPO, but they came too late and were smart enough to cancel it. But their long-term plans probably were done with that extra cash in mind. And, let's be realistic, their move to the US market wasn't exactly a success.
Lot's of OffTopic replies (Score:2)