SuSE larger than RedHat 252
Suse: We are the largest.
As a reaction to the IPO of RedHat, which requires the company to disclose its earnings, german Linux distributor Suse has disclosed their own numbers. While RedHat reported a turnover of $11M between March 1998 and February 1999, Suse reported a turnover of almost $15M (Deutschmark 26.6 M) between 01-Apr-1998 and 31-Mar-1999. Like RedHat, most of this is due to their distribution sales (Deutschmark 17.4M). Unlike RedHat, who lost $130.000 during this time, Suse was able to report earnings of an undisclosed amount during this time.
Both companies employ approx. 130 people each at the time and are growing rapidly: In 1Q1999 Suse reported a turnover of Deutschmark 9.5M, an increase of 230% compared to the year before. Since the funding of SUSE Inc. in the USA, german Distributor Suse is focusing more and more on the international market. CEO Roland Dyroff reported a larger than proportional growth of the US daugther. He did not want to answer direct questions about an IPO, though. "
Re:Slackware! (Score:1)
to English.
Sharing OK, selling not (Score:2)
Still, the YAST license is the main reason why I am still running Red Hat on my machines. There are other reasons (Red Hat is more enterprise-friendly in the way they lay out their filesystem, for example), but the YAST license is the key.
-E
Re:Good for competition. (Score:1)
I depend on my system for school related stuff and I can't afford any problems (working on too many long term projects).
Re:SuSE installer (Score:2)
-E
Re:both SUSE and RedHat suck. (Score:1)
more SuSE users than RedHat users worldwide ? (Score:1)
Currently we observe 20% to 30% more SuSE 6.1 users than RedHat 6.0 users. The observation is meaningful because the shareware version of mtv is bundled with those two Linux distributions.
By the way, RedHat now asks all ISV (Independent Software Vendors) to pay $2,495 if they want their products (commercial or shareware) bundled with RedHat's next release!
Needless to say, we will not pay RedHat this kind of money, when many other Linux distributors (like SuSE) will bundle our shareware without charging us a dime.
Re:both SUSE and RedHat suck. (Score:1)
gestures at the neighbors undulate and that
little birdie whistles the proper codes
into the phone. What, animal abuse? Oops.
For receiving I don't use anything, I just
mathematically deduce the probability of
different comment topics, now my abacus
told me the current topic is suse vs. redhat.
Then again, it's pretty common to have
any flamewar.
template
slashdot::comment(V, U)
{
if (robPostsAnything())
badmouth(IAmFor(V) ? U : V);
else
badmouth(this);
}
SuSE is larger than RedHat (Score:2)
Duh (Score:1)
Good for competition. (Score:1)
But I'm still going Debian when 2.2 is stable.
Re:both SUSE and RedHat suck. (Score:1)
I have an abacus, with shifting magnetic field to make the beads represent raw binary!
And at night, turn reboot my machine, I have to touch my tongue to the power supply!
...Sorry, Monty Python....
Re:Pansy. (Score:3)
My CPU doesn't even have transistors, it uses electromagnetic relays hand-made from old paperclips and rubber bands. And toggle switches -- a real programmer just touches the bare wires together.
Kids these days.
Re:R&D costs (Score:1)
Skippy
Gee, Redhat 6.0 is $80. (Score:2)
Re:both SUSE and RedHat suck. (Score:2)
Computers.... Who needs em?
:P
Re:dont forget the per hour telco fees in europe (Score:1)
Re:It simply better ... *warning pro suse* (GNOME) (Score:1)
TurboLinux (Score:1)
Does TurboLinux use any proprietary or non-Open Source stuff in its install or setup? I've been thinking about switching over to it (or maybe I'll just stick with the Cheapbytes-RedHat devil I know
Re:Transatlantic Attitude (Score:1)
1996: Telia begins testing ADSL in Sundsvall Sweden.
1998: Commercial ADSL connections are introduced in sweden.
I dont find that so suprising (Score:2)
Ummmm different tax laws !?!? (Score:1)
Cat Always loses for three quarters and then shows a profit ( well , usually shows a profit ) int eh last quarter .
Remember that the US and Germany have totally different ways of collecting and regulating taxes . This could explain why Redhat showed a loss while SuSe showed a profit this quarter .
look at RedHat's spending on Research as well !!
20 % of their income to that alone !!
Impressive
SuSe 6.0 is a very nice system , by the way . I am not bashing it in any way . I am bashing the arguement that is based on the revenue of a quarter ( not a year ) . Success is not measured in Dollars but in usage ( at least in the open source community ) .
Your Squire,
Squireson
" For every complex problem there is an answer that is simple , clear and wrong . " ( Menkle ? )
Re:they buy more than the US (Score:1)
If cable modems or DSL are available where you live. In a lot of the U.S., neither are available.
both SUSE and RedHat suck. (Score:1)
the only true distro is a manual one, installed via hexediting a hard drive. The rest of you are sell-outs and losers. I have spoken.
Re:Transatlantic Attitude (Score:1)
I just don't understand how you could take a JOKE that is showing the flaws in arguments like this and turn it into some form of anti-US statement. Unless you're just trolling. In which case, shut up you moron, you're mother blah blah blah...
Re:Debian needs to get in on this!!! (Score:1)
Re:SuSE + Dynamic IP (Score:1)
Sure, there's a lot of software on the 5 disks, but not somethings that I wanted, like E DR0.15.5.
SuSE (Score:2)
Is anyone running SuSE 6.x? Is it as good as I hear?
SuSE = linux for dummies (Score:1)
SuSE and the Mandrake distributions are the best distributions for beginners, people who like to get away from the dumb windows world and start with linux but don't have any base knowledge or don't know any background information about linux.
But if you're a real freak and like to experiment and "play" with your linux system, then forget SuSE!
It simply better ... *warning pro suse* (Score:1)
i never thought i would write that, but suse
linux installs are a lot easier, faster and
the system runs like a clockwork.
suse europe edition has all the crypto addons
on the cd. so you can do a "full" install without
the net.
yast is really good. linuxconf and the xconfigurator
(or whatever it is called) both want to do the
same thing and you simply don't feel any comfort
using them. (and *need* x for overview and
handling.)
the overall concept in redhat is awful: e.g.
i wanted to download the new xserver, because my
card wasn't supported. ppp setup using the book:
linuxconf textmode cored - ok graphics mode
16 colors, 640x480: linuxconf won't run without
256 colors. ah! linuxconf html with lynx: won't
execute any changes. (redhat 5.2)
well thats it for a normal user, i haven't tried
to use netscape with that resolution
(i had to use minicom & pppd and some routing,
which of course is not beginners stuff)
yast had its suseppp stuff integrated and it
worked at first try. (suse 5.3/6.0) funnily they
changed it in 6.1 to a graphical tool, but there
is a "doing it by hand" section in the book.
thats the next thing. the redhat book is a book
microsoft would ship
configure & ciao
more backgrounds and tries to explain complex
things too. e.g. the bootloader chapter is better
than any howto i found
now bad things about suse too
(finally
suse however doesn't like gnome
both use rpm and install packages you didn't
select
(really - no fun!! no auto-select-dependencies)
and yast always complains about packages other
programs *need*, like one command line program
has a beta tcl/tk script and now the package
needs: X,libXf***,TK,Tcl,libTclAddon99
if you force it, you get the message every time
you use yast install
to tell rpm to forget about dependenies *i*'m
in controll of
suse updates simply work (5.3 -> 6.0 not
recommended because of libc). suseconfig is
something you can get along with (after some
hacking). however you *need* to get used that
/etc/rc.config the *the* script. control of
everything in one file
redhat is a nice system, but just because it
from the us it's not the best. it needs
more than that. i guess suse will spread to
the us too and on the other hand i also guess
redhat will/is doing better in the future (i just
can't buy every redhat edition just too test it,
too little time.)
suse is easier to control and faster during
the installation. i tried both, i use both, but
i prefer suse and i recommend it for beginners
too.
well i left out a lot of distributions. so
finally i have to mention debian. the package
system is better. the package selector is a pain
in the
without a fancy envelope
source. (afaik yast is binary only, redhat
includes binary only stuff too.)
i would say: beginners go with suse, and advanced
users should try suse or debian. if you like
redhat stay with it
flavors of LINUX, so they all taste good, but
some people prefer strawberry and others like
kiwi better
so why did i write all that? i don't know, but
maybe you get a grip why suse *could* be better.
CU,
Armin
they buy more than the US (Score:1)
Re:you can ONLY download OLD versions of SuSE. (Score:1)
RedHat put 6.0 out for ftp installs at the same time it shiped to the stores.
When I said RedHat is cheaper, that is because you CAN get the newest version from Cheapbytes, or for free. The box is $80 but that is if you want the application CD. You really only need the binaries and source. With SuSE you cannot do that.
Re:both SUSE and RedHat suck. (Score:2)
(yes, i know i stole if from UF, forgive me)
Transatlantic Attitude (Score:1)
> native language, at least!"
US citizen? oh well
FYI: non-US citizens *hate* US letter paper format, not supporting ISDN, transatlantic keyboards and the American way of Life.
Re:The Organisation of Debian vs Redhat vs Suse (Score:1)
autodetection, but didnt find my wierd stuff
and RPM managment to me seemed HORRIBLE. I cannot understand how this came to be so popular. I would only
recommend Redhat to people new to *Computers*. 2/5
Debian, after using SuSE and redhat feels soooo nice. Forget dselect, it is worse than any package manager in SuSE or
Redhat, stick with dpkg -i [packagename] and apt!!! Apt is great.
Well, like everything in Linux, there's more than one way to do anything. Don't like GnoRPM? Me either - I just `rpm -Uvh filename.rpm`. If it's on an ftp server? No problem - if I really wanted to, I could write a wrapper script that tries to use an RPM I've got locally, and if there's a newer version, FTP it in.
Debian is good if you already know a bit about computers and partitioning and stuff, it seems the most "linuxy" dist. To
get hardware going you dont use any horrible sndconfig or whatever programs, you just do an easy, powerfull kernel
compile (im sure redhat can be the same here, but debian doesnt have all that extra useless software). To configure a
program you start up vi in
as a gateway. I would recommend Debian for anyone wanting to run a "neat" and "elegant" dist. It gets 6/5
Anyway, im really not suprised that SuSE has bigger sales than redhat considering how much better it is.
RedHat unstable? Granted, 6.0 had a few flaws, but a few upgraded packages have made my systems even more stable than 5.2. And hey, if you don't want to use sndconfig or anything like that, no big deal. I configured my soundcard using make xconfig, and editing my isapnp.conf in good old vim. You don't have to use the GUI tools - I generally avoid them since I like to stare at the guts of my system's configuration.
weird thought... (Score:1)
From what I know (and I could be wrong), the US has a lot more high-bandwidth connections available at reasonably low cost, be it cable modems, [A]DSL, or just plain university networks. Therefore, it is very much feasible to think that a lot more people in the US just download Red Hat without paying than might download SuSE in Europe, due to the simple fact that it takes too damn long to do so unless you have a good (ie. 128k or higher) connection.
But I could be completely wrong.
On a related note: does cheapbytes ship to Europe? (or similar companies?) If not, that would be another factor.
Of course it could just be more people buy SuSE
Or it could be the amount of $$$ RH spends on GPL'd r&d.
Who knows.
Gearing up for an IPO? (Score:1)
Redhat files for an IPO, Suse sees that they're as big as Redhat, why not go for it too. Once they actually file, the SEC won't let them make press releases like this one, so they need to get the PR machine up and running before they file.
I think you have it wrong (Score:1)
Exactly! (Score:1)
It's proprietary because it CAN be. I don't know why people seem to think that having a free and open OS means we need to have every bit of code we run on our systems free and open. If I had the money, and they hadn't all-but opened the license, I would have paid for StarOffice (I got it with my new SuSE 6.1 distro, which rocks, BTW, though it seems to be lacking some package entries). Why? Because it works, and I like it, and if someone can make something that I need, like, and want, and it works, then I have no problem paying them for their time so that I can better use mine.
Besides, it's an INSTALLER. What do you need it for other than to install their distro from their CD's? If you're THAT bent on getting a replacement, go look at dialog and code your own package and administration manager, sheesh.
Re:Gee, Redhat 6.0 is $80. (Score:2)
Besides, if you're paying $40 or $20, you're still getting ripped off if you don't need tech support. Cheapbytes loves you.
----
Re:both SUSE and RedHat suck. (Score:1)
I am lucky there's an electric storm tonight so I'm able to read
Older distros - and the newest (Score:1)
I just got a copy of SuSE 6.1 a few days ago and and going to install it soon. It really looks sharp - 5 CDs and a decent manual !
I've been watching and 'lurking' in the Linux scene for a long time waiting for it to mature, and am now finally taking the plunge.
Download Once and forget forever. (Score:1)
Re:40% Linux? Rather around 1% (Score:1)
MISSING THE POINT (Score:1)
1) If you look at the balance sheets from the IPO posting, they're making a ton of money and reinvesting it in themselves, as they should instead of sitting on cash.
2) Red Hat has been spending heavily to strike up many of their strategic alliences with businesses like Atria, Oracle and many others.
3) Red Hat is positioning themselves to be a "Linux for Business", not [just] for the hobbiest - that's why they give their releases away. They know most people would copy it even if it wasn't freely distributed. Businesses want a company they can rely on for support of their machines O/S's, and that's the service Red Hat provides and sells along with ushering in the big companies to port to Linux (or Red Hat's version) and help legitimize Linux as a business platform. No shame in that, and people shouldn't get into the holy wars of "best distribution" because that's not what Red Hat is doing -- they are trying to get business to embrace Linux.
Re:Transatlantic Attitude (Score:1)
Oh great! What are we going to post about then? (Score:1)
--
go to CheapBytes (Score:1)
I got my RH6 for US$12 (including S&H). Or, if you are so lucky - download it from the net.
So far I've no complaints w/ my RH 6.0 running on my Tochiba labtop (Satellite 2535CDS)
Re:40% Linux? Rather around 1% (Score:1)
It's always difficult to get good statistics without a representative group. Counting the percentage of Linux by looking at Slashdot's access statistic won't give yoy the real picture. Nerds like Linux so the number will be higher than the real picture.
Windows 95/98 is used for gaming, Linux/NT for the more serious stuff.
Re:Gearing up for an IPO? (Score:1)
Nick
Re:both SUSE and RedHat suck. (Score:1)
Oh man, you're doing it the hard way! get yourself a 10 ft. pole to toggle the switches like I do. That cuts twenty feet off of your trip!
Re:Color ANSI (Score:1)
Re:All a matter of accounting (Score:2)
A more interesting question is the difference between US and German accounting systems. My knowledge of German accounting is very sparse.
Re:Redhat throws a better party though (Score:1)
night with a line up a mile long to even see the one free keg. jeez.
Whoa - you're wrong there. I hung out quite a lot w/ "Stacey from LinuxExpo" - the tall blonde haired girl that was cooridinating the expo and asked why that party was such a shitty one.
It's *NOT* SuSE's fault. That party was supposed to be the same as the one at Jillian's but the resturtant/club where it was held fucked up.
They were charging ppl for everything, when it should have been free beer, wine, and soda till 9.
By the time the blunder was realized, it was too late to do anything about it. That's why they made all those announcements in the begiing b/c The Warehouse (I think that was the place) was in error, not SuSE.
So - next time try and be a little more informed before you speak.
p.s. I wasn't all that impressed w/ Red Hat's private party either. As I recall, they ran out of beer and that punch stuff 1/2 way through the party. The canoli's (sp) were good though.
Re:Caldera? (Score:1)
The latter doesn't necessarily imply the former; Noorda's personal wealth may have come from other sources - Novell, say, to pick a hypothetical source at random. :-)
Re:both SUSE and RedHat suck. (Score:1)
Re:SuSE (Score:1)
Also much, much, much cheaper than RH ( I got it for $25-ish at Chumbo, well worth it).
Re:Gee, You're a friggin Moron. (Score:1)
gee, I'm going to rip on a person who seems to have justified reasons to believe what he believes, because that seems to be the cool thing to do these days.
Man. I think I'll make my sig, "Don't be a jackas."
Re:RedHat is like Microsoft..yeah right. (Score:1)
Red Hat bashing (and SUSE vs RedHat) (Score:2)
But then I have a question, which of Red Hat and SUSE bring back most to Linux? Red Hat pays kernel hackers (Alan Cox and others) and GNOME programmers. I know that SUSE makes X servers but not much more.
Well, I use Debian anyway but to me the company that pays Alan Cox is more likely to get my money.
I think in the future when Linux grows even more we will have stars like in sports where people want someone they can identify themselves with. Could Alan Cox be such a star? Well maybe not for the big masses.
Hmmmm...embrace and extend? (Score:1)
just my $0.02
Re:SuSE installer (Score:1)
At one point in time, SuSE was selling a "german slackware". Then they created their own distribution based on Jurix by Florian La Roche (they hired Florian), plus YaST, and some other goodies. Slackware was not the basis of modern SuSE.
Re:Transatlantic Attitude (Score:1)
Re:Transatlantic Attitude (Score:1)
2) What doesn't support ISDN? FWIW, ADSL is cheaper and faster anyway.
3) windows supports foreign keyboards, and Linux supports at least a few types of foreign keyboards
FYI: not all non-US citizens share your opinions on every subject imaginable. If they all hated the American Way of Life, we wouldn't have so many of them trying to immigrate to the U.S.
Re:Wimp! (Score:1)
machine? Don't forget to publish your changes
to the source code before selling it to
another tribe!
Which distro ? *so what* (Score:1)
Im sorry, but my thoughts are really wandering here (beer), but all im trying to say is linux in general will benefit from what each distro will/is contributing, and I dont think any one distro will become the next M$, becuase of the public liscense.
/drunk rant
Re:Let's get it out of the way (Score:1)
Re:exactly (Score:1)
Actually, RedHat (as of 6.0) charges more than SuSE. RedHat's list price for their Official 6.0 box is now $80, compared to SuSE's list price for their Official 6.1 box which is still $50.
The price differential is one of the primary reasons I bought the boxed version of SuSE 6.1 instead of the boxed version of RedHat 6.0.
I will probably want to put RedHat 6.0 on a couple of my boxes which currently have RedHat 5.2 on them, but I think I will just buy the CheapBytes CD (for $2 plus shipping, or about $10 total).
Incidentally, CheapBytes and/or LinuxMall also sell cheap CD-only versions of SuSE 6.1, Mandrake 6.0, Debian 1.3 and 2.1, and Slackware 4.0, Stampede and even FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD for those so inclined.
Re:SuSE (Score:1)
Re:SuSE (Score:1)
I've been completely happy with it, it's install is much nicer the RH5-5.2 install.
YAST is pretty nice, political issues aside..
It is primarily a German Language product, but you dont see too much of that when you set it up for English Language.
I like the SuSE X setup program better than the default provided by RH5
I'm a bit of Linux newbie, only about 5 installs and never rebuilt a custom kernel yet. I've been using Unix (Sun) for 10 years and NT for about the same. Just so you know where I'm coming from...
*whack* (Score:1)
The SEC is US-only. SuSe is German.
---
Put Hemos through English 101!
Whoops (Score:2)
FWIW, I think this whole thread should be a 5.
Re:SuSE (Score:2)
That pretty much says it all.
Re:SuSE installer (Score:1)
SaX SuX (Score:1)
ConfigXF86 rules anyway.
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:SuSE (Score:1)
I LOVE IT! 6.1 is great: easy to configure, faster, more stable, etc. i like YaST, and SaX is MUCH better than Xconfigurator.
the day i tried to live, i blew up the outsied world...
Ryan
Re:SuSE (Score:1)
However there are a lot of good people on the suse-linux-e@suse.com mailing list who are willing to help. It's getting a bit crowded these days though.
Damn newbies!!!
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:Download is not the issue (Score:1)
I believe that LinuxMall does have cheap (
Re:Download is not the issue (Score:1)
I believe that LinuxMall does have cheap (less than $5) SuSE 6.1 CD's. The $27.50 list InfoMagic 6-CD "Linux Developer's Resource" CD set includes SuSE 6.1 (of course it also includes RedHat 6.0, Caldera OpenLinux 2.2, Slackware 4.0 and some other stuff). So there may not be as much of a cost issue with SuSE as an awareness issue.
Re:Download is not the issue (Score:1)
I always forget those pesky greater and less thans in the text.
Re:Download is not the issue (Score:1)
IMO YaST has its limitations anyway. Better in every respect to use the Caldera-sponsored COAS if you can. That is at least distribution agnostic and if it ever gets adopted by RedHat, SuSE and the rest, that will answer one of the outstanding criticisms of Linux (sysadm tools differ too much between distros).
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:Transatlantic Attitude (Score:1)
Re:Transatlantic Attitude (Score:1)
Re:Gee, Redhat 6.0 is $80. (Score:1)
-Yoon
Re:Transatlantic Attitude (Score:1)
-Yoon
Re:SuSE (Score:1)
I found SuSE to be a bit too quirky for my taste, but very well put together
Then again, I did an FTP install, and YaST for some reason had to query an FTP site every time you wanted to use YaST every time you wanted to do some friggin' little change. Is it this way when you actually shell out cash for the CD? Do you have to insert your CD just to run YaST? Hrm, don't have that problem with RH...yah, I know that if I were man (stupid?) enough, I'd just fire up VI and edit
Oh yeah, and what's up with not shipping kernel sound modules?
Re:Transatlantic Attitude (Score:1)
Try *that* with US letter.
Re:Exactly! (Score:2)
Because I like to share my CDs with my friends.
I can do that with my Red Hat CD. Even though SuSE may have slightly more revenue, Red Hat probably has a lot more users.
Re:Pansy. (Score:2)
I've been doing DNA computing, using sequences derived from my own blood. Concocting a cheap replacement for the gel electrophoresis was the hardest part. I was able to save and recycle enough Jell-O to do it, and instead of running an electrical current over the gel I've been blowing gently on the DNA sequences to seperate them out by length.
Even though I've lost a lot of blood, it's really worth it to get to read slashdot. I don't think I'd faint quite so often if I didn't have to waste so much computation time on adfu.blockstackers.com. But it's still worth it. Go Linux!
My distro can beat up your distro... (Score:5)
"Well, my distro's company has 135 people on-staff, and yours only has 127."
"Oh, yeah, well, my distro uses the latest version of the KNODE desktop, and yours defaults to an older version of GNM!"
"Oh yeah, well, my distro has version 1.0.3a of libdumbthing, and yours is stuck at version 1.0.3!"
"Oh yeah, well my distro is supported in my native language, at least!"
"Oh yeah, well my distro's company channels 127% of their profits into development of Open Source software for getting food to Vietnamese orphans!"
"Oh yeah, _VIETNAMESE_ orphans... that went out with glibc 2.0. My distro's entire staff pays $25/hour for the privelege of contributing to the code, into a fund to educate Laotian children to program in Java."
"Whatever."
"Moron."
Re:both SUSE and RedHat suck. (Score:3)
You really can't compare the twos numbers (Score:3)
SuSE Not Good (Score:4)
All a matter of accounting (Score:4)
'gains' in any quarter or year are all a matter
of accounting, especially for a these relatively
young and small companies.
In some situations it
is better for them to report losses and avoid paying income taxes than to report huge gains and end up paying taxes on them.
Without a serious analysis of the two companies'
financial situations, I wouldn't put much stock in the article.
Loss (Score:3)
thumb for US businesses is that during the first few years of operation they want to post a small
loss -- particularly if they are looking to obtain
investors. There are tax reasons for this, but
the general logic is that a company should not
show a profit for the first few years so that it
is clear that they are reinvesting their receipts
into development of the business.
Incidentally, I have RH6 because that's what they
had at work, but I'd agree SuSe is probably the
better dist.
Wimp! (Score:2)
Re:SuSE (Score:2)
1) RPMs are not named consistantly with RH RPMs. This seems to cause confusion for updates and dependancies. This is a major problem to me, as I couldn't just use most of the tools in RPM form that I previously downloaded and backed up. I now have to get SRPMs and --rebuild or --recompile. I don't really mind the extra time, but the name change seems gratuitous.
2) GNOME is not very well supported. Enlightenment was DR0.14 (yes, yes, I know that I could use another window manager, but I'm happy with E. Shouldn't I get a choice, at least?). Get with it, DR0.15 was out for quite a while before SuSE 6.1 shipped. It just seemed to me that the distro was VERY KDE-centric. In fact, when I tried not to install KDE (unselected those packages from the install process), it installed the KDE base anyways. Why? Also, GNOME is installed in
3) Configuration of printer and network cards was clumsy at best. In fact, neither worked for me. Printer - should have used the universal print driver (for an Epson color stylus 740, or at least allowed me to install my UPD), since it was GS 5.10. The network configuration wouldn't let me choose a dynamic IP for my PPP dialup. Since both my ISP accounts are set up this way, I couldn't use YaST to configure my PPP dialup.
4) My monitor wasn't in the (painfully small) Monitors database for X. RH5.2 did have it, and it was great to setup. I had to futz with the GUI X configurator that SuSE developed, which took about two hours, as I didn't have the old configuration anymore; far, far too long for my taste, when RH5.2 allowed me to set up X in about 5 minutes. Granted, this is a small detail, but one reason I switched to SuSE was that it was supposed to be better about the small details.
5)YaST was not intuitive enough. Neither is linuxconf, but I thought YaST was supposed to be a major selling point for SuSE, and better than linuxconf.
6) The manual was almost useless to me. I found that I already knew everything that was generic to Linux, and the SuSE-specific stuff didn't go far enough. Or maybe SuSE just wasn't capable of what I would expect. I don't know, since I still am unable to figure some stuff out (like printing setup, dynamic IP setup, etc.).
So, while RH5.1, RH5.2 and Slackware (the only non-RedHat distro that I've used) weren't perfect, I found them much more palatable than SuSE is. And those are comparably old to me. Things should get better, not worse, when I upgrade to a "better" system.
Just my $0.02. I think that other, more ranting, post helped me clear my head... This one was only SLIGHTLY inflamatory!!
Re:40% Linux? Rather around 1% (Score:2)
That's a desktop share on a specific web site. Is it a Windows web site? Are they specifically made for Internet explorer?
Web browser hits mean crap. If it were true, we could say that Linux has a huge market share by the number of browser hits from Linux on slashdot.
Re:SuSE Not Good (Score:4)
They are responsibe for adding 3DLabs, Rendition, some trident, Cyrix, and SiS X servers, most of which are now in the current XFree server.
They are also supporting the development of ALSA, by hiring the primary programmer, Jaroslav Kysela, full time and allowing him to work on ALSA professionally.
Both of the above are either in the GPL or under the XFree License.
They may not spend 10% of their earnings in new development, and may not have hired a lot of well known Linux people, but they seem to be a quality company, and many people like the distribution.
Lighten up...
jf
Re:Wimp! (Score:2)
Re:they buy more than the US (Score:2)
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