Upcoming SuSE 9.0 Professional Reviewed 204
molarmass192 writes "Open magazine has the first review I've seen of the upcoming SuSE 9.0 (or should that be SUSE 9.0 now?) Professional distribution. To summarize, they are impressed with the upgrades to Yast (it's fully integrated into the KDE control panel), Samba integration, Winmodem support, network configuration management, and performance. It's not the most thorough review I've ever read, but it's an interesting look at what to expect for those who have preordered SuSE 9.0."
Oh Suse Q (Score:5, Funny)
Oh SUSE Q, Version 9.2, SUSE Q."
Re:Oh Suse Q (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Oh Suse Q (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Oh Suse Q (Score:1)
Kind of ironic... (Score:1)
SuSE is awesome...mostly. (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess that's good. Most everything is behind a version or two by the time it hits your hands though (in the past).
Perhaps I'm simply spoiled by the FreeBSD ports collection (any good package manager really) where I run cvsup to get the ports collection current, then I can either build from source or pkg_add -r pkgname and install the binary quickly across a network.
Don't take this a knock though, SuSE was the *nix that I learned on, and it's still awesome. Just seems somewhat unwieldy to bundle so much software in that is going to go out of date so quickly.
Great for situations without net access though.
Re:SuSE is awesome...mostly. (Score:1)
Re:SuSE is awesome...mostly. (Score:4, Interesting)
Remember, tho, that it's a European product. All those binaries are in there because, first, it's a great selling point, and, second, because bandwidth costs more in Europe. Systems like ports or emerge are only viable when bandwidth costs are negligible. That's why all those European Linux magazine stick CD's and DVD's on their covers.
Re:SuSE is awesome...mostly. (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:SuSE is awesome...mostly. (Score:2)
Re:SuSE is awesome...mostly. (Score:5, Informative)
This is why I love APT for SuSE [linux01.gwdg.de]. A simple
sudo 'apt-get update; apt-get upgrade'
and I have the current versions of everything -- just like using the ports tree in FreeBSD. Check it out, you might find it interesting. And it respects the RPM database, so you can still use YaST or install/remove RPMs manually if you want.
It's great! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:It's great! (Score:2)
Yes we should support people who produce open source, and not just the big projects like Samba, Apache, Rsync, etc. I have software included in the SuSE professional edition that I wrote.
When it's displayed in Yast there's a field for Author name / Homepage. Do you think those fields give me credit? Do you think I even got an email from SuSE? Do you think I might have received a free boxed copy?
Nope.
I only noticed as a colleague pointed it out to me when setting up a SuSE professional box to install
Re:It's great! (Score:2)
I sometimes think that the commercial linux vendors should offer free copies to open-source developers. But I also fear that that might be most o
Re:It's great! (Score:1, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:It's great! (Score:2, Funny)
Also,it's more than "some handbook". It's a frickin' set of doorstops
Well, at least you're getting some use out of it. ;-)
Re:It's great! (Score:5, Informative)
Suse happens to pay programmers that work on the Kernel, particularly the ISDN interface, the RAID drivers and many other areas. Suse also sponsors reiserfs, several KDE subprojects and a lot of other projects. That's you money at work.
Kristian
Couple more reviews (Score:5, Informative)
Mad penguin review [madpenguin.org]
german review [pl-berichte.de] (translation [altavista.com])
- Jj
Re:Couple more reviews (Score:2)
Ain't that the truth.
Re:Couple more reviews (Score:3, Interesting)
the competition is tough (Score:1, Interesting)
That compliment does not come easily. I typeset annual reports in WP Win, use Paradigm database manager, dream in Excel macros, am a regular customer of InfoUSA mailing lists, use and despise WinWord and Netscape, and li
What kind of performance increase? (Score:3, Insightful)
I switched to Freebsd because its slim and lightening fast. I have a hunch its mainly its own version of xinet and yast that slows things. I wonder if it could be faster and if it is, if I should switch?
Re:What kind of performance increase? (Score:2)
I know what you mean, but the problem was not SuSE, it was KDE. Newer versions of KDE are much better, or you could use one of the lightweight WMs and enjoy the related performance boost.
I don't know how that compares to FreeBSD though.
Re:What kind of performance increase? (Score:1)
(and I suspect the difference probably isn't the kernels either, but related to the default packages and services the respective systems install by default)
Re:What kind of performance increase? (Score:2)
Re:What kind of performance increase? (Score:2)
I believe the installed kernel isn't replaced until the first online update. Is that update available to people who haven't purchased SuSE?
Re:What kind of performance increase? (Score:2)
Torrent (Score:3, Flamebait)
Also, do they actually think that people buy it since they can't download an install iso instead of just using a differnet distro like drake?
Freeloaders (Score:2, Informative)
Actually they *know* people buy it whether or not they'd offer a free ISO download. Also what's this obsession with ISO downloads? SuSE install images would span at least 7 ISO image files. They offer the entire FTP/SAMBA-based install set of files for free download, about 6GB worth, so the total download btye-count to get yourself a freeloader's install-base is abou
Re:Freeloaders (Score:1)
I download the ISO's so that I can use them as virtual CDs in many situations. Right now my Linux\Distros directory has RedHat, Gentoo, Slackware, Debian, SuSE, TinyLinux and Smoothwall in it. That's a lot of GB just full of ISOs and accumulated driver sources. I keep that HD formatted to fat32 so that I can use it read/write in Lin/Win.
Mount them after booting from a floppy and installing the system
Mount them with alcohol and share them in windows (or indeed FTP as you suggested)
Mount the ISOs as virtua
Re:Torrent (Score:2)
Re:Torrent (Score:2)
Re:Torrent (Score:2)
If people don't think that's worth paying for, that's their decision. I suspect SuSE figurs they havent lost a sale, anyway, since people who expect Linux to cost nothing, as well as being free, aren't much of a market.
Re:Torrent (Score:5, Informative)
I've never understood why people care about the iso thing. You can do a ftp install off of two floppies, or burn the ftp/http/etc install cdrom and use that.
FTP Install Instructions [suse.com]
Re:Torrent (Score:1)
"This SuSE Linux 8.2 installation tree is suitable for installation via ftp, http, nfs, smb or hard disk."
I don't think that's the same version the rest of us are talking about.
They don't have 9.0 available for free download yet, and they usually don't make the new versions available until the software on them is horribly out-dated.
That's what other people are complaining about.
And that's what they mean when they say "Does SUSE expect people to pay for it instead of just using somethin
Re:Torrent (Score:1)
wrong, you can download in iso (Score:1, Troll)
Anyone who has used SuSE won't switch to a toy like Mandrake.
Still waiting for Distro "X" (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Still waiting for Distro "X" (Score:2)
Re:Still waiting for Distro "X" (Score:1)
Also, since when is debian a non-standard package format? It's used by more than just debian these days, and who sets these standards anyway? I don't see your problem with apt-get, espe
Re:Still waiting for Distro "X" (Score:1)
You had me going until then, but this last one makes me say "no thanks." Just today in the lab I had to pull up the command shell in XP. Why the double standard?
Re:Still waiting for Distro "X" (Score:4, Insightful)
Working on the assumption that you didn't put this in just to troll ...
Has the command line stripped out with EVERYTHING, I MEAN EVERYTHING possible for the GUI, NO EXCEPTIONS, not even for Emacs zealots)
There you go, spoiling it. You described the perfect OS until you said that.
The command line is NECESSARY you dolt. Necessary, as in, can't live without. As in no matter how pretty you make your OS it still runs on text, and you have to get to that text sometimes. If you want nothing but pictures, grab the funnypages. In this world the command line lets you fix problems that arise in ways that they never teach you in college. Its the command line that keeps people like me in employment while kids straight out of university are still scratching their heads over how to write shell scripts.
Re:Still waiting for Distro "X" (Score:1)
Re:Still waiting for Distro "X" (Score:2, Interesting)
for i in $(find ~/altimetry ~/SSH-anomalies -name "*.gif" -type f); do convert $i `dirname $i`/`basename $i
Show me that GUI, and I'll abandon the command line.
Hardware detection (Score:5, Interesting)
+-XP (Score:2)
Re:+-XP (Score:2)
Re:+-XP (Score:1)
Re:Hardware detection (Score:2, Interesting)
Why the hell can't Debian do this?
And how is that different from SUSE 8.2? (Score:2, Interesting)
Namely it set up dual boot with Windows XP and mounted the NTFS file systems read-only.
Re:And how is that different from SUSE 8.2? (Score:2)
Where can a person download it? You know, the ftp-installer?
Re:And how is that different from SUSE 8.2? (Score:1)
The one feature I want (Score:2)
I know about programs like airsnort, but when will a distro build this feature in? Wireless networking is still a major pain in Linux
Re:The one feature I want (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:The one feature I want (Score:1)
Re:The one feature I want (Score:2)
All the adapters I've tried have been auto-detected under Mandrake 9.2, knoppix 3.3 and gentoo, except the ADMtek-bas
Just installed it myself... (Score:5, Informative)
Anyway, I copied all my important data onto the server downstair, stuck the disk in a did a full install. (I've always done an upgrade before, but I thought it was about time to have a clean sheet again).
I was really impressed with the installation - went really smoothly, and detected nearly all my hardware straight off, with only the Wacom graphics tablet not detected. It was improved over previous versions in that it gave options for connecting to networks and authentication via LDAP and stuff like that. One of the last things it offered to do was connect to the internet to get the latest updates, which I allowed it to do. It also got the proper NVidia drivers and the MS TTF fonts.
I did the usual fiddling to get the display exactly how I like it, copied the data back from the server and I have a fully working system again.
Now I'm starting to notice the improvements. The first thing I noticed was the considerable improvement in boot speed. The next thing I noticed was how the fonts were all looking really nice without me having to change any settings. (Although I have now changed to Bitstream Vera because I prefer that).
Then I plugged my camera in, and a new icon appeared on the desktop for it automatically. (I tried to ages to get 8.2 to do that).
My samba connection to the server is working without me having to fiddle with any settings.
I'll admit it's early doors yet, but so far things are looking really good, and I'm very pleased I upgraded.
Re:Just installed it myself... (Score:1)
Fools Rush In - Wait for Steve (Score:4, Funny)
Better safe than sorry.
next version of Redhat won't be free (Score:2)
Re:next version of Redhat won't be free (Score:2)
This is the potential pitfall of growing businesses around linux. By necessity, a business is all about profit. I don't begrudge Red Hat for doing what they need to to remain in business. This is why I haven't even considered using their distro since the IPO.
LK
Re:next version of Redhat won't be free (Score:1)
Re:next version of Redhat won't be free (Score:2)
Too bad they didn't seem to like it much. (Score:2)
Heh. So much for "objective and unbiased." But as a SuSE fan, I do understand.
Re: (Score:1)
Re:802.11x Wireless support (Score:2, Informative)
Re:802.11x Wireless support (Score:4, Informative)
Having said that, in my experience they work even better with the linux-wlan-ng code.
The Athlon64 support is nice (Score:2)
sun (Score:2)
Isn't it wonderful.. (Score:1)
Nice upgrade (Score:5, Interesting)
My experience with SuSE was that 8.0 was good, 8.1 was buggy, and 8.2 has been quite stable. They addressed many of my complaints about missing modules in YaST in 9.0, which is good. I also like the fact that they're using GCC 3.3.1, which IMO is *much* more stable than 3.3 or the pre-3.3 SuSE included in 8.2 (although 3.3.2 was just released).
I've already upgraded my SuSE 8.2 to use KDE 3.1.4 (which is available via FTP from the supplementary section of the SuSE FTP site (and mirrors), and have found it to be quite stable. It looks like SuSE 9.0 is basically just an evolutionary step from 8.2. I think the release number should really have been 8.3, although I guess they're under pressure from Redhat. I also like the fact that they backport a lot of features from the 2.6 kernel back to 2.4 (the SuSE kernel scheduler is basically taken straight from 2.6). When Linus came out with the interactive patch that makes X much more responsive I was able to verbatim take the patch and apply it to the SuSE Linux kernel.
I also love the fact that SuSE comes on DVD. It's nice to not have to swap between lots of CDs when installing various packages.
And finally, YaST is a great tool that always surprises me. Last night I went to enable telnet and rlogin support on a machine in our lab (security is no issue) in xinetd and Yast immediately requested that I install the appropriate CD and installed the RPM packages required (they were not already installed).
-Aaron
9.0? (Score:2)
They upped from 7.x to 8.x when we got into KDE 3... there's no tremendous new version of anything important except YaST.
Re:9.0? (Score:2, Interesting)
9.0 just means "ninth year, first release".
This explains why there has never been a SuSE x.5 or higher in all those years...
OT: Rollover images in a review? (Score:2)
On an OT note, that's a different approach to doing graphs, using two images and some rollover javascript. I must say, it didn't work for me. I kept mistaking them for adverts.
Go ahead, mod this down now...
I want it bad (Score:2)
But can anybody tell me the difference between the full professional version and the upgrade? As far as I can make out from the website, the only difference is that with the upgrade you don't get the user manual.
Does it actually check during the install if you have a previous version? Hey, if it does that's fine with my, I have a full 7.3, I was just wondering though. I mean, if it doesn't, why doesn't everybody just get the upgrade version, or shouldn't I be say
Re:I want it bad (Score:3, Interesting)
I checked with my distributor, and the disk set is identical. No 'Check for previous version' sillyness. What differs are the manuals - you get an upgrade manual that (presumably) outlines the main differences from the previous version. I think this is in good Linux / Open Source spirit. The price diff is less than I'd pay for two Linux books at my bookstore anyway, and I'm very content to let the excess money go
Re:I want it bad (Score:2)
Ah yes, that makes sense, and in fact I also just noticed that the support you do get is 60 days as opposed to 90 days.
Right, well, I've ordered it, and even got a couple of the small geekos for the kids, nothing like getting them started early eh?
Cheers.
Buy one, install many! (Score:3, Insightful)
Furthermore, no license costs are incurred for the installation on multiple machines or for software subject to the GPL (General Public License).
on their 10 reasons to switch [suse.com] page. Cool.
Re:Can you download ISOs yet? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Can you download ISOs yet? (Score:1)
Re:Can you download ISOs yet? (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Can you download ISOs yet? (Score:2, Informative)
I don't like CDs anyway because they just tend to get lost...
I like the DVDs though, because with those you don't have to change CDs anymore. btw how many disks is the current SUSE?
Re:Can you download ISOs yet? (Score:2)
When someone comes to me and says:
"Windows did
No dodgy 6 floppy Debian installs, no faffing around with downloading stages for Gentoo (although it's my fav distro for anyone that knows about Linux). Just let RedHats very friendly installer hold their hand all the way through, ask them all the righ
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Why do you need an ISO? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Can you download ISOs yet? (Score:2)
(you may want to use a mirror)
Re:Can you download ISOs yet? (Score:2)
Re:File transfer problem (Score:1, Informative)
Re:File transfer problem (Score:2, Insightful)
Performance is never better than mediocre under KDE but that's not the real problem. The real problem is that it frequently seizes up completely.
On many occasions it coincided with me
Re:File transfer problem (Score:2)
Something is definitely wrong with your setup. SuSE 8.1 shipped with gcc 2.96 as a base so be extra weary about trying to run apps compiled with gcc 3.2 (eg. any Mozilla later than 1.3). I can't guarantee that that's the problem but it's a place to look. As for X taking up a lot of memory, that sounds about right. However X is effectively a shared resou
Re:File transfer problem (Score:2)
Re:File transfer problem (Score:2)
Re:File transfer problem (Score:2)
Re:Why not just use Debian? (Score:1)
We'll all wait around until YOU write an operating system; we'll see how good that is; and when you tell us you have bills to pay, we'll tell you to do what you're telling all your friends in the community to do right now.
Re:Why not just use Debian? (Score:1)
"might as well install ms?" I think you're a little confused - if you thought the whole point of linux was price tag, you've missed the whole point.
Re:Want list (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Want list (Score:2)
I started on SuSE 6.4 and then gave up for FreeBSD on the server side and Mac OS X on the Desktop. It is still the best distro for beginners. YaST was an amazing tool. I had tried to install Redhat before and couldn't get RH 5 to work, but SuSE worked great without any problems, everything was detected except for my mod
Re:The sound you hear (Score:1)
But you were talking about Unstable, and I'm using Sid (Debian Unstable) so I can use my winmodem, XFree86 4.3.0, CUPS 1.1.19, emacs 21.2, GCC 3.3.1, KDE 3.1.3, MPlayer 1.0pre2, Perl 5.8.0 and other up to date software.
BTW, I love the way Conecti
Re:so much to download (Score:2)