Review of SuSE 8.1 Professional 323
Gentu writes "SuSE 8.1 is out and it seems to be the main competitor of Red Hat 8. OSNews has the review of its Professional version. The new SuSE 8.1 seems to be sleekier and more powerful than ever." Eugenia, as usual, isn't shy about saying what she doesn't like. There's a review on Linuxlookup.com as well.
Competition (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Competition (Score:5, Funny)
You mean BSD?
Re:Competition (Score:2, Funny)
"It's odd that RH, SuSe and Mandrake compete with each other more than their common enemy."
You mean BSD?
"
No need! Haven't you heard? BSD is dying! I think they're going after CPM next...
Re:Competition (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Competition (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Competition (Score:2, Funny)
The Judean People's Front?
No! The Romans.
Re:Competition (Score:2)
No, the People's Front of Judea. Judean People's Front...wankers [montypython.net].
Re:Competition (Score:2)
It's not always about Linux vs Microsoft, ya know.
Re:Competition (Score:3, Insightful)
LSB (Score:1)
Re:Competition (Score:1)
That means that our software rapidly improves in the presence of competition, while M$'s crawls along getting worse in almost as many areas that it is getting better.
The Real Capitalistic market that open standards and source code is slowly bringing about is what will finally kill Microsoft.
Re:Competition (Score:2)
Re:Competition (Score:2)
Total domination by one organization is.
In the end, many, many Linux companies will dominate software just like many, many PC-makers currently dominate hardware.
Re:Competition (Score:3, Insightful)
I have an operating system. It is made of of thousands of packages, each of which have a handlefull of alternatives. Now look at the newer distro's comming out such as Lindow's, Midori, or even OS X. They all target different markets and thus design their systems differently.They use different combinations of components to best fit their goal, and compete among each other within their respective target markets. A more mature version of this sort of thing can be seen in other products, such as electronics or cars.
Now each of these companies start out with a stock linux (or BSD or whatever) system but change it, as they have the money and time, to improve it for their market. This is demonstrated by the fact that the longer that linux has been around, the more distro's that have popped up and the more varied some of them have become.
Furthermore, you put many competing products in the market place, and standards suddenly become benificial to the companies, while they are detrimental to the monopolys. Thus look at the computer hardware market where each field began with proprietary products, but standards where soon formed for the second or third generation of the product.
I don't want to see one operating system (but if we are going to have a monopoly then yes I'd rather have an open one) But I guess you can call me 'fanatical' about an idea: The well founded idea that standards and a certain level of openness is greatly benificial to capitalistic markets, resulting in better products, lower prices and a healthier economy.
To me, this is exciting: a real thriving computer software industry as apposed to this stagnant sespool that is Microsoft.
Re:Competition (Score:1, Redundant)
Re:Competition (Score:2)
Re:Competition (Score:2)
If some other country had a product with hemp in it, they would not be able to sell in the US. Even if you believe that hemp should be legal, it's not something for them to take a stand on, and loose a large market, just so YOU feel better.
Re:Competition (Score:2)
Besides, it's not rms' job to force a country to recognize another country, either. Since when did free software have anything to do with country borders?
Hey, this whole China/Taiwan thing isn't that much different that the events leading to the US civil war. Who is RedHat to say that China is wrong... they make software?
What's flawed about the hemp analogy? IJust like taiwan's flag, hemp is legal in one countly, but not in another.
So, Mr. Troll, try some rational arguements. I'm not one to get annoyed by petty insults...
Re:Competition (Score:2, Interesting)
> each other more than their common enemy.
I don't think so. I think this is a good thing, because it will give us better Linux distros. And better Linux distros will someday jam Linux into Microsofts monopolistic gears.
The day every hardware gadget and game in stores comes with a anonymous note on the back that says "Supports Windows YX and Linux", the goal is reached.
Through competition (and only competition) will Linux improve to that point.
IMHO and YMMV
Re:Competition (Score:2)
But really, All Linux products compete against Mic products. That's why we have nice easy installations and lots of bloated worthless eye candy when half the Linux users still use vi and the other half are trying to figure out how to play GTA in a window.
I've always believed that people who ask "Can I use Word in Linux?" are simply trying to find a way to cuss Word in another language.
SuSE vs RedHat (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:SuSE vs RedHat (Score:1)
Re:SuSE vs RedHat (Score:2)
SuSE (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:SuSE (Score:2, Funny)
Re:SuSE (Score:1)
As long as the distros keep seperate then they'll all pick a slightly different direction and have a slightly different idea on what is a simple and useful OS. This allows all of us to pick and choose for the particular problem we're solving.
And don't forget. . . (Score:3, Insightful)
Look, you can have the slim and sexy Swiss Army knife. .
That's just the way it is. I canna change the laws of physics Cap'n.
KFG
why the wait? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:why the wait? (Score:1)
Re:why the wait? (Score:1)
It was, and you did.
Re:why the wait? (Score:1)
Re:why the wait? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:why the wait? (Score:3, Funny)
cluestick, meet nogoodmonkey
WHAPPP!!!
Re:why the wait? (Score:1)
Re:why the wait? (Score:1)
In the same understanding
It's time to switch to Mandrake they are at the Linux 9.0 One entire playing level beter than RedHat, Slackware and all other Debian (has only Linux 3.0) !!!!
Oh my god, please save us !
Re:why the wait? (Score:2)
Just download the current tree at slackware.org [slackware.org]
Just installed slack 8.1 last night. Runs great on a p133 for a small server/
Re:why the wait? (Score:2)
I usually install the base, the networking stuff, and x, and compile everything else from source. Apache, PHP, Mysql, Squid, ssh all compile without gripes. The filesystem layout is sane and farmiliar.
All-in-all, it's a James Doohan flavour of linux, and I wouldn't have it any other way.
Re:why the wait? (Score:2)
once the server is production-ready, x gets pulled.
Re:why the wait? (Score:5, Funny)
It's time to switch to Mandrake they are at the Linux 9.0 One entire playing level beter than RedHat, Slackware and all other Debian (has only Linux 3.0) !!!!
Well, ha... I'm running Windows 98, so I'm like 91 levels above Mandrake.
SO, uh, WINDOWS USERS CANT COUNT EITHER? THINK OF THE CHILDREN, DON'T USE MICROSOFT!
Re:why the wait? (Score:2)
Re:why the wait? (Score:1)
leaps and bounds. Ever heard of Slackware 5?
Neither have I. And I've been using the distro since the time when it was a bunch of floppies (some of which ended up suffereing a most painful death when some toddlers I'm related to decided to use them as bath toys...)
Re:why the wait? (Score:4, Informative)
From their website
The following was posted to the Slackware.com Forum by Patrick Volkerding (Slackware Project Lead), at 21:43 10-10-1999.
I've stayed out of this for now, but I do think I should lend a little justification to the version number thing.
First off, I think I forgot to count some time ago. If I'd started on 6.0 and made every release a major version (I think that's how Linux releases are made these days, right?
I think it's clear that some other distributions inflated their version numbers for marketing purposes, and I've had to field (way too many times) the question "why isn't yours 6.x" or worse "when will you upgrade to Linux 6.0" which really drives home the effectiveness of this simple trick. With the move to glibc and nearly everyone else using 6.x now, it made sense to go to at least 6.0, just to make it clear to people who don't know anything about Linux that Slackware's libraries, compilers, and other stuff are not 3 major versions behind. I thought they'd all be using 7.0 by now, but no matter. We're at least "one better", right?
Sorry if I haven't been enough of a purist about this. I promise I won't inflate the version number again (unless everyone else does again
Re:why the wait? (Score:2)
On the other hand Debian, which is fully non-commercial is only at Linux 3.0, what is up with that? Those lazy mother******. They should be working hard on getting me Linux 9.0 like Mandrake right NOW. I hope Jeebus punishes them for their lack of effort.
Huh? (Score:1, Funny)
"Sleekier" (Score:1, Troll)
Obilgatory "I'm gonna get modded down," comment so I get modded up.
linux installs (Score:3, Insightful)
Knowing that the new install tool is tricky, I'll still stick with SuSE. It's stable and intuitive without the use my way and like it that redhat tends towards or the I work great if I decide to work of mandrake.
If linux ever intends to become a mainstream (read: NON GEEK) OS, it needs to become dependable, easy to use and easy to install. For example, why did it take me almost 3 days to hack my way to using my qwest dsl connection without having to boot into windows? DSL is a standard technology now, you should be able to use it easily.
Re:linux installs (Score:5, Funny)
It's stable and intuitive without the use my way and like it that redhat tends towards or the I work great if I decide to work of mandrake.
For example, why did it take me almost 3 tries to hack my way through the previous sentence? Complete punctuation and grammar are standard technologies now, you should be able to use them. Thanks!
Re:linux installs (Score:2)
Not many people actually install Windows, they just live with what's on their PC when they buy it.
RPMS for SuSE 8.1 (Score:2, Informative)
for SuSE 8.1? I know that lots of people
with SuSE 8.0 and older would like to upgrade.
The rpms are GPL'ed so where can they be downloaded?
+5 karma to the one who gives a FTP or similar
Re:RPMS for SuSE 8.1 (Score:2)
Upgraded my SuSE Sparc64 8.0 to gcc3.2 and kernel 2.4.19, works great.
Re:RPMS for SuSE 8.1 (Score:2)
They probably aren't there yet, as it usually takes a few weeks for SuSE to get their FTP version ready.
Re:RPMS for SuSE 8.1 (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:RPMS for SuSE 8.1 (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:RPMS for SuSE 8.1 (Score:2)
However the binaries (RPMs) are distributed, so too must be the source.
The binaries (e.g. the CDs) are NOT freely redistributable unless SuSE says so, mainly because of the non-GPLed, commercial software.
You may redistribule the files on the source CD, so long as you only redistribute the non-commercial parts. Redistributing Yast will get you in deep legal trouble.
Re:RPMS for SuSE 8.1 (Score:2)
Wrong. FUD. read the fucking license terms.
I don't know why people feel obliged to spout off such a nonsense.
I shouldn't do it, but anyway, I digged out something which your eyes clearly have never seen before, the yast license:
So check your facts next time, please!
Re:RPMS for SuSE 8.1 (Score:2)
If nothing else, Yast is not under the GPL, so it can't be dealt with as such, as the original post was implying.
Fell free to bitch and moan about it more if it somehow makes you feel better.
Re:RPMS for SuSE 8.1 (Score:2)
With the exception that yast is indeed not GPL, everything else you said is factually wrong.
is it free? (Score:1)
Re:is it free? (Score:1)
Also should be available in any moment in the ftp server of SuSE the Live-eval CD, you can't install it but at least can try it running from the CD.
But there is no free installable ISOs for SuSE since 7.0 or so. You must buy it to install it.
"not sure if I am very fond" (Score:4, Funny)
From the story: "I am not sure I am very fond of the way SuSE expects you to click to different parts of the installation instead of going step by step."
When an American woman says that she is "not sure I am very fond" it means that she is certain that she doesn't like it.
Re:"not sure if I am very fond" (Score:2, Funny)
Dammit (Score:3, Funny)
Not enough raw data dumping on me like feces (Score:4, Funny)
Suse 8.1 (Score:3, Informative)
For some reason the advanced power management doesn't work, (it did with 8.0). Also, although the wireless stuff recognizes my wireless card, there are links missing for it to make in internet connection. Too bad. Also its hard to put Latex on the computer anymore, you have to hunt it down, and emacs did not install automatically.
I don't know...
Sleekier? (Score:2, Troll)
Sigh.
Re:Sleekier? (Score:2)
Re:Sleekier? (Score:2)
Does that mean she likes it, or not? (Score:3, Interesting)
"However, if SuSE fix some of the issues they have, get rid or redesign that package manager, license the Web Fonts, add some more GUI settings panels for wireless support, FTP & HTTP servers, better integration with Windows, fix some of their untested or buggy applications they include in their CDs, modify Star Office and GTK+ application to look more as their primary Qt platform and other such details, I believe that Red Hat's 'empire' in the Linux world will be in jeopardy."
Does that mean she likes it, or not?
Re:Does that mean she likes it, or not? (Score:5, Insightful)
It was thinking (if you can call it that) like this that gave us the dot.bomb crash.
go ahead, mod this as flamebait, but I think the original article was a real POS, and that reviewers should be required to actually USE the product in a production environment for more than a few days before writing about it.
It wasn't the reviewer's best work. (Score:2)
"Unfortunately, this has been the trend with too many reviewers - they look at the superficial stuff, and make up their minds based on whether the colors are pretty, and this passes as in-depth journalism."
I agree. Someone taking the review seriously, and having no basis of comparison, would think that SuSE was a terrible distribution. Also, it is somewhat irrelevant that the distribution doesn't install well at the resolution used by 24" monitors.
I also agree with this: "It was thinking (if you can call it that) like this that gave us the dot.bomb crash."
It wasn't the reviewer's best work.
Re:It wasn't the reviewer's best work. (Score:2)
Interestingly, I have an old (4 years) Dell branded 21" Sony Trinitron. Installation of Suse 8.0 would not allow me to configure the monitor to 1600X1200. After installing at a lower resolution I spent an hour or two playing with various configuration tools to enable the monitor at 1600X1200.
Suse 8.1 Professional, which I just finished installing, allowed me to configure this directly resolution during installation (although it wasn't the default, which I would have preferred). The tool should also allow an expert user to enter specific modelines, without resorting to the command line. In fact I didn't need to do this, as I could select 1600X1200 from a check box.
So I'm not sure why the reviewer had the problem she had with her monitor, but my experience shows that Suse 8.1 monitor and resolution selection is much improved over the last version.
-Spyky
Re:Does that mean she likes it, or not? (Score:2)
My point is that, if this was a review on useability, she should have at least USED the thing, rather than just griped about the installer.
Just got my copy today (Score:2, Informative)
No DVD problems to report like the reviewer encountered. However, the software configuration in the install is still quite poor (no change from 8.0 from what I can see). It did a fair job on hardware but I still had to hit Sax2 to properly configure my monitor.
That said, once installed, it has a nicely polished KDE desktop. I like the icon choice but default "curved" windows I just don't like, back to KDE 2 window decoration it goes. I do like the changes the made to the Yast character mode interface, much easier to navigate. I'm also a little disappointed that it shipped with 2.4.19 instead of 2.4.20.
Overall, not bad but non-techs would require a small amount of hand holding trying to install this release from scratch. The DVD has a very complete collection of software on it that is relatively up to date. It a nice tool to have handy when you're on the road.
Re:Just got my copy today (Score:5, Funny)
That's not all. Here's a list of what else is missing:
I guess we'll have to wait for 8.2.
Re:Just got my copy today (Score:2)
OK, explain something to me. SuSE ships with SEVEN CD's and ONE DVD. The reviewer has a DVD drive, but encountered a bug loading the CD's in the DVD drive.
Why wasn't she using the freaking DVD in the DVD drive? (She couldn't tell them apart is not an acceptable answer).
XFT Font Properties (Score:5, Interesting)
This is very important! People keep bitching about Anti-Aliased Font support, well why is RedHat the only including an advanced utility? Fonts are 99% of your visual aspect of your desktop, good looking fonts make a BIG difference. (side note, Mosfet Liquid engine/theme is a must..)
I'm a SuSE (sparc64), Mandrake (x86) user. Mostly because Mandrake had the better font support. I've switched over to RedHat 8.0 due to the XFT font support.
BTW, I shouldnt have to recompile the desktop to have decent font support. So dont keep saying "Compile yourself". If I wanted a source based, compile everything yourself distribution, I would use Gentoo. (Gentoo doesnt include all the custom applications for preferences.)
Re:XFT Font Properties (Score:2)
When the next official X release comes out with support for XFT2 and the next official qt release comes out with support for it, then SuSE will put them in the supplementary version of your favorite mirror. SuSE does not ship beta versions of core componentes like glibc or X.
SuSE has been antialiased (XFT1) for more than a year now, KDE3 offers a good way to install fonts, I do not know what is missing exactly. I think Eugenia did not know about kcmfontconfig. No problem here (SuSE-8.0).
Only fools use REdhat and KDE (Score:2)
Redhat is not an option for me, I am in love with KDE since 0-Beta2. GNOME just feels slimy and hacked together to me.
This distrib is ok if you like KDE (Score:2, Interesting)
-themeable login manager
-flexible bitmap themes that allow you to tweak window behavior into something that you want
-granular control over the look-and-feel of the environment (multiple toolbars, drag and drop launchers, etc...)
-a more standarized approach to where binaries go: '/usr/local/bin' rather than '/opt/kde' (Of course it would be better if things were more like '/usr/local/kde', but thene again I compile everything I use.)
If the only thing you do with your computer is read e-mail, browse the web, word processing, and balancing your checkbook, then KDE should fit nicely. But if you like to express yourself creatively and customize your system for ease of use, KDE is not going to make you too happy.
RedHat's Blue Curve approach is probably a little stronger than SuSE's version of KDE. I've only seen screenshots, but it's much prettier.
Re:This distrib is ok if you like KDE (Score:2)
Re:This distrib is ok if you like KDE (Score:2)
For me, the absence of themes and other crap in KDE is a bonus. Call me old-fashioned, but I like consistent, functional user interfaces and no surprises. That's why programs like Mozilla, Java Swing, WinAmp3 and dozens of other programs, including "webbified" Microsoft apps and GTK+ apps on Windows, are offensive, because they impose their own UIs and interface conventions on users, thereby alienating users.
Consistently-designed eye candy, such as that provided in Mac OS X, is fine. Inconsistent eye candy is not. Eye candy that slows your system down is downright evil. Ultimately, all these skinned, semi-transparent drop-shadowed non-rectangular windows are taking CPU time and resources away from what these apps are supposed to be doing. Even relatively conservative apps like Mozilla suffer from the overhead of custom UI painting, the result being an app that "feels" inexplicably bloated.
If you need to dress your operating systems in mother-of-pearl and velvet with singing angels and fluffy pink clouds, then be my guest, express yourself. Just don't pretend it has anything to do with an operating system.
Re:This distrib is ok if you like KDE (Score:2)
First let me say, that GNOME1/2 are part of SuSE-8.1. This part of your post is wrong. All other things you said are missing in KDE are there.
-themeable login manager
KDM is themable. How often do you log in? Does Gnome force you to log in more then once a week?
-flexible bitmap themes that allow you to tweak window behavior into something that you want
No tweaking necessary, kwin is configured by GUI. Just rightclick on the title bar and configure it. Support for the old gtk-bitmap themes has not been ported to the new qt3-theming engine yet, that is true. Most of them are low quality anyways, so KDE has just about 10 nice and fast coded themes.
-granular control over the look-and-feel of the environment (multiple toolbars, drag and drop launchers, etc...)
Sounds like a cereal to me... What is missing? toolbars? drag and drop? What are you talking about in KDE that can not be configured? I think you have no idea what you are talking about at all.
-a more standarized approach to where binaries go: '/usr/local/bin' rather than '/opt/kde' (Of course it would be better if things were more like '/usr/local/kde', but thene again I compile everything I use.)
This is depending on your distribution. On SuSE Gnome is in /opt/gnome2 for example. Just set the KDEDIR where you want it before compiling it, e.g. /usr/local/kde or even home/eno2001/I/have/no/clue/about/kde/ if you want.
Mostly irrelevant... (Score:3, Insightful)
The OSes have more important aspects than installations. Anyway, the OS is installed ONE time, but used MANY times...
Why in hell she rates an OS by its installations process?
Eugenia will never like anything (Score:5, Interesting)
First she complains about the installer not making enough decisions, then she complains about SaX making decisions.
In reality, the installer DOES make all decisions. All it does (and that was obviously confusing Eugenia) is SHOW these decisions to you and allow you to change it. But it doesn't force you to do anything at all.
What's wrong with that? The below-average complete moron (which everybody seems to be targetting these days.) just presses "Install" and it installs without any need to configure anything. On a computer with one clean harddrive or partition, the install should work just fine with the default settings.
Hell, even Eugenia was able to install the damn thing, so it's dumbed down enough.
Also, unlike Eugenia sais, SuSE comes with CDs *AND* DVD, not "or".
7 cds?! (Score:2, Insightful)
1 CD to install the OS. This would be the only cd necessary to install the operating system. With just this one cd, the user would be able to install their chosen distro of GNU/Linux and get a graphical desktop with some very basic apps (I'm picturing basically everything on the accessories menu on windows).
Up to 2 cds of apps - an office suite, dev tools, games, whatever. After using the single OS install disc, the user would then be able to pop an apps cd into the system and choose what they want.
No source cds. I'm not saying that distro makers shouldn't provide source code to the binaries that they distribute (they should!) and I'm certainly not saying that source is useless (it's not!). I'm just saying that making ISOs of source packages available for download is a great way to waste bandwidth for users and mirror sites that don't bother to mark them as non-essential to the process of 'getting something working'. Windows doesn't have a loop device to check out isos before they're burned, so newbies from windows can't help but be confused. (Yes, I know about Daemon Tools. Does everyone else?)
It would eliminate bloated 2GB default installs and cd swapping. Sure, there wouldn't be a (start|hat|k|foot|swirl) menu that takes up 10MB of space on disk just for the items it contains, but that's probably a good thing.
I'm not bashing suse or RH or any of the other GNU/Linux distros. I'm just saying that the default install/CD bloat is way out of hand and this would be an easy way to solve it. The way I see it, it's a no-brainer like replacing "scary" printk's during kernel startup with a booting progress bar (by default).
Re:7 cds?! (Score:2, Insightful)
Don't worry. SuSE doesn't allow others to distribute their iso images.
In a few months you'll be able to download the SuSE rpm's you do like.
Re:7 cds?! (Score:2)
Re:7 cds?! (Score:2)
Re:7 cds?! (Score:2)
That's cool. Debian does the same thing (except with a floppy or two) and with gentoo it's practically mandatory.
On my cable modem, 8.0 took about 1.5 hours to do this.
This is what tends to worry me. If you're using (just an estimation) a 1.5Mbps downstream cable modem and you're getting half that in throughput (due to local contention for bandwidth, server capacity, whatever...) then you've downloaded about 500MB of data. It was probably compressed so it's probably taking up more than that on your hard disk (and even more if the installer kept the packages around) but downloaded 500 MB of data would take over a day of continuous connectivity on a 56k modem assuming optimal conditions.
Some people like ftp-based home installs, and they certainly make sense in a corporate environment with fast ethernet and an on-site ftp server or when broadband internet access is available and you don't mind waiting 1.5 hours. In a home setting, though, internet installs trouble me for a couple of reasons. First, they don't work (well) with modem-speed connections. Second, they depend on the company too much. I realize that suse probably isn't going to do anything evil, but imagine what the reaction would be if windows required you to connect to microsoft to install in a similar manner. Just look at the (admittedly ineffective) uproar over product activation in winxp.
Of course, users that don't want to do ftp installs can always use the 7 cds, but then we're back where we started.
service packs and windows update (Score:2)
Re:7 cds?! (Score:2)
It's possible that I'm missing something, but I don't see how you can have a multi-cd OS install without CD swapping.
With SuSE I see no "bloat problem" to solve.
I wasn't talking about a "bloat problem" in relation to the number of cds per box, although I guess that term could be used to describe it. When I said "bloat" I was referring to the size of the default install. I haven't used suse since I helped a friend install 7.something on his secondary computer, but I have installed redhat recently. It irks me that I can install windows 98se in 200-300MB or W2K (which I'm currently using) in under 1GB but I can't seem to get a GNU/linux install under 1GB. I know, I know, I could go console only or try gentoo and do everything myself or select only the individual packages I need but, well, I'm just not willing to do that and neither is the average user. Setting aside the religious debate as to whether GNU/Linux should be made easy enough for the "average user", I think we can all agree that default "basic desktop functionality" installs are getting way too big.
Re:7 cds?! (Score:2)
"or none":
I'm not counting ftp installs when I'm talking about multi-cd distros. I have a whole spiel about them, but I won't go into that now.
"one or two":
Congratulations to redhat for getting 7.3's 3 down to 2. I look forward to testing it out when I can find a download site with available bandwidth. It's about time for me to check around again.
I have no idea how you got modded up...
Well, moderators are unpredictable as a rule (unless they're slashbots
SuSE migrated me. (Score:3, Insightful)
Distros save you cooking the cuisine but therefore give you fastfood. You can't have both. And SuSE is the best darn distro I've ever seen - making the best job of offering a fastfood cuisine compromise.
It's that simple.
For instance: the documentation simply 0wnz RedHat and all the rest - and a dead tree is something good to hold on to when your box won't budge and you haven't been told the "man 'your one-word question here'" trick yet.
SuSEs YaST got me so far with me knowing nothin' 'bout Linux, I would have found it silly to give up again.
Shure this automatic stuff tends to be a pain a year later when your "/usr/lib/java ->jsdk1.4.1" gets changed to "/usr/lib/java ->jsdk1.1.2" every time you fire it up once again, but when you are ready to notice the fault in some distros config I guess you're ready for Debian.
I'm not buying SuSE anymore, as I am not buying any Distro anymore. I'm expierenced enough to get Gentoo or Debian rolling from scratch and if anything it's them getting a donation.
But for n00bs like I was one once, I know no better way to turn to Linux and *never* look back on Windows again than SuSE. This company has earned itself a solid reputation for a reference grade quality Linux distribution and every word of it is true. If you're thinking of giving Linux a try, try SuSE.
I can only recommend it.
Feh (Score:4, Interesting)
I, for one, think you'd have to try pretty hard to find SuSE's installation difficult. She complains about the problems for newbies, but this is SuSE 8.1 Professional. Yes, it's for professionals.
Having said that, I think the installer is wonderful for newbies. I like the fact that you get a summary (which is like a web page, as Eugenia said), and you can drill down as deep as you want to customize it. If you like the defaults that the installer has chosen, you can click OK and go right to the installation. I can't imagine why a linear progression through a wizard would be preferable.
If you honestly have a hard time installing SuSE, then I just can't imagine what kind of installer you'd find easier. (I guess that's why I don't design installers.)
OT but must ask (Score:2, Interesting)
Here are my gripes. Avoid rh if your a developer (Score:3, Interesting)
Just select the K menu and select control panel. Select the default theme. After that find the sytles menu. From their select kde default instead of bluecurve. Last click on the upper left hand Window title bar on any running program. I am not a on a linux machine currently but I believe you can change the Window decoration on one of the settings by right mouse botton clicking it and selecting docarations. Browse and find the default kde2. This will get rid of the bluecurve default titlebar. You may want to keep the default font since the orignal kde ones are ugly as hell.
The only problem I noticed is the default kpanel is gone and replace with the gnome one. I know this because I played around with some of the settings and they are almost identical to the gnome panel. Also you may need to download the default icons from kde's website.
Doing all of these will bring back %95 of the kde desktop back.
What really annoys me more then the gui is the exclusion of apache1.3x and perl 5.6!
Do you have any perl cgi scripts that access a mysql database? Your SOL. Redhat included the older gcc 2.9.5x compiler but not the older perl or apache. And no, perl is not fully source compatible with perl 5.6 like the perl mongers say it is.
I am learning perl programming from a college level book called "How to Program Perl" by Dietel and Dietel. Many cs majors have used their c and c++ books. I tested all the example programs and noticed alot of problems. Particularly with return statements, threading, mysql access, and cgi since mod-perl has not been fully ported to apache2 yet. The return statement problems seems to be caused by some changes in default scoping rules. I can easily changes these but I want to learn how to program and not learn how to deal with perl 5.8. Everything else can not be ported. I do not mind the newer versions of apache and perl being included. I would just like the older ones installed optionally as well as gcc. Apache 2.x is not ready for anything besides static webpages.
In other words avoid this release if your an internet developer.
On the other hand my gripe with suse is that their distro's have always been buggy and not as reliable as redhat or debian.
For my games which require low latency sound(sucks on w2k), and low ping times I will stick with redhat. I have noticed ping times cut in half in some circumstances and my scores are higher due to low latency for sound. I am already dead before I hear the rocket sometimes under w2k. For software development, I will stick with Windows2k.
Yast2 & professionals? (Score:2, Funny)
LOL...
Come on, grab ARCHIVES.gz from the first CD, use zgrep and rpm to install. Yast2 is the worst, I have ever seen/used. Using SuSE since their first distro (4.2).
Where can I download the ISOs? (Score:2)
Re:Is there a download version of Suse (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Is there a download version of Suse (Score:2)
Of course, SuSE 8.1 isn't on the FTP sites yet.
Anyone going to be offering (3rd party) ISOs for download anytime soon?