Mesa, VirtualBox, Ceph, NetworkManager Packages Update in Tumbleweed
Three openSUSE Tumbleweed snapshots have been released in the first four days of June, which bring several minor package updates to the rolling release.The 20190604 snapshot brought babl 0.1.64, which...
View ArticlePeople of openSUSE: Stasiek Michalski
I’ve been using computers for as long as I can remember, playing Solitaire, The Settlers, and other simple DOS games, because that’s what my parents and grandma liked to play. I started with Win95, 98,...
View ArticleReview: openSUSE Leap 15.1
openSUSE is one of those distros I have always been interested in but which I had never used for more than a few hours. Recently the project released Leap 15.1, which was a good enough reason to give...
View ArticleRed Hat and SUSE: Openshift, RHEL and Cloudwashing
Using Kubernetes Operators to Manage Let’s Encrypt SSL/TLS Certificates for Red Hat OpenShift DedicatedNo Downtime Upgrade for Red Hat Data Grid on OpenshiftIn a blog post I wrote on the Red Hat...
View ArticleNew node.js LTS, GNU Debugger, libvirt Updates Arrive in Tumbleweed Snapshots
One of those key packages was an update of the GNU Debugger, gdb 8.3, which was released in the 20190607 snapshot. The debugger enabled ada tests on ppc64le and riscv64; multitarget builds for riscv64...
View ArticleSUSE: SLE 12 Service Pack 5 Beta 1 and More
SUSE Linux Enterprise 12 Service Pack 5 Beta 1A demo based introduction to SUSE Cloud Application Platform At the recent SUSECON conference in Nashville, Peter Andersson and Peter Lunderbye from SUSE...
View ArticleRed Hat and SUSE Leftovers
Are DevOps certifications valuable? 10 pros and consKubernetes 1.15: Enabling the WorkloadsThe last mile for any enterprise IT system is the application. In order to enable those applications to...
View ArticleOpenSUSE/SUSE: Leap 15.1 Update Experience, Btrfs in YaST, SUSECON and SUSE...
The openSUSE Leap 15.1 update experienceMy desktop is a HP Pavilion Power 580-146nd. This is a midsize PC with an AMD Ryzen 5 1400 CPU, an AMD Radeon RX 580 GPU, 16 GB of RAM, a 128 GB M.2 SSD and a 1...
View ArticleRenaming openSUSE
At the 2019 openSUSE Conference, the openSUSE board discussed governance options at length. There will evidently be an official statement on its conclusions in the near future, but that has not been...
View ArticleRed Hat and SUSE Leftovers
How a service mesh helps manage distributed microservicesA service mesh brings security, resiliency, and visibility to service communications, so developers don’t have to RHEL 8: 'the foundation for...
View ArticleSUSE: Release of SUSE CaaS Platform, SUSE Enterprise Storage, SUSE Linux...
SUSE CaaS Platform 4.0 Beta 3 is out! SUSE CaaS Platform 4.0 is built on top of SLE 15 SP1 and requires either the JeOS version shipped from the product repositories or a regular SLE 15 SP1...
View ArticleopenSUSE Tumbleweed vs leap: What is the Difference?
Before talking about the differences between these versions of openSUSE, let’s have a brief look at its background and features. Earlier it was known as SUSE Linux but after a software company Novell...
View ArticleSUSE Manager 4: Traditional server management marries DevOps
Managing Linux servers has never been easy. Programs like Cockpit, cPanel, and Webmin use a GUI to make it simpler to handle common sysadmin tasks. But, with servers moving from the racks in your...
View ArticleServers: SUSE, Ubuntu, Red Hat, OpenStack and Raspberry Digital Sigange
A Native Kubernetes Operator Tailored for Cloud FoundryAt the recent Cloud Foundry Summit in Philadephia, Troy Topnik of SUSE and Enrique Encalada of IBM discussed the progress being made on...
View ArticleLibreOffice's LibOCon and SUSE's openSUSE.Asia
LibOCon Almeria Call for Papers New DeadlineCall for Papers deadline for LibOCon Almeria, in Spain, has been extended to July 15, 2019. The event is scheduled for early September, from Wednesday 11 to...
View ArticleopenSUSE Leap 42.3 Linux OS Reached End of Life, Upgrade to openSUSE Leap 15.1
Released two years ago, on July 26th, 2017, the OpenSuSE Leap 42.3 operating system was the third maintenance update to the openSUSE Leap 42 series, which is also the last to be based on the SUSE...
View ArticleLWN's Latest: An OpenSUSE 'Foundation', Security, Programming and Kernel (Linux)
An openSUSE foundation proposalThe idea of spinning openSUSE out into a foundation is not new; it has come up multiple times along the way. The most recent push started back in April at two separate...
View ArticleOpen Build Service bids farewell to old UI and – what did you just ship there?
Open Build Service (OBS), an open source system to build and distribute binary packages from source code, is now available in version 2.10. After a year in the works, the openSUSE-nurtured project now...
View ArticleLeftovers: OpenSUSE, SUSE and Red Hat
openSUSE.Asia Summit 2019 Logo Competition WinnerThe votes are in and the openSUSE Project is happy to announce that the openSUSE.Asia Summit 2019 logo competition winner is Hervy Qurrotul from...
View ArticleOpenSUSE Leap 15.1 - A dream come untrue
OpenSUSE Leap 15.1 is significantly better than the first edition. It fixes tons of the problems that the previous version had. But then, it still retains lots of problems and introduces some new ones....
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