Tech Broiler

Jason Perlow and Scott Raymond

openSUSE 11.3: The Linux Lizard Lives

By | July 19, 2010, 8:56am PDT

Summary: Novell’s openSUSE 11.3 community Linux OS brings stability with KDE 4.4.4, a fresh 2.6.34 kernel and support for the new BTRFS file system.

Novell’s openSUSE 11.3 community Linux OS brings stability with KDE 4.4.4, a fresh 2.6.34 kernel and support for the new BTRFS file system.

The last time we looked at openSUSE was back in October of last year. It’s been a long haul for the SUSE community between versions, not just in terms of the effort to do the coding, but also in terms of the way the openSUSE community has been handling itself in general in relation to its peers.

Also Read: openSUSE 11.2 M8, What a Fine Lookin’ Lizard

Also See: openSUSE 11.2 M8 Gallery

openSUSE 11.3, the latest version of Novell’s community Linux OS was released on July 15th. I’ve put the OS through its paces for the last several days and I have to say that while I continue to be impressed with the functionality of openSUSE, I’m not seeing a huge amount of sexy in the latest release.

At best, I’d call openSUSE 11.3 a bug fix/service pack for 11.2 and 11.1. There are a few new features, most of which are under the hood, but from an end-user perspective there isn’t a heck of a lot of new stuff to see here.

I’d liken openSUSE 11.3 to the “Windows 7″ of openSUSE releases, where 11.1 and 11.2 were more “Vista”. Most of this can be attributed to the fact that KDE 4.x prior to the most recent 4.3 and 4.4.x builds was horrendously unstable.

In terms of aesthetic improvements, If you look at the openSUSE 11.2 M8 gallery from last year, it’s pretty much a good representation of what the latest version still looks like, almost a year later. I didn’t bother with creating a new gallery for that exact reason.

This is not to say that KDE 4.4.4 looks dated — in fact, it’s one of the most attractive and modern UI’s I’ve ever seen on an operating system. But it’s clear that rather than introduce new functionality with this release, the openSUSE as well as the KDE 4 teams focused on stability and performance. The openSUSE product highlights page details some of the more gearhead incremental changes and improvements to this release, if you want to dive in.

Under the hood, openSUSE supports the 2.6.34 Linux kernel, the latest ALSA 1.0.23 and X.org 7.5. As with Ubuntu, 10.04 LTS, the “nouveau” open source nVidia driver is now the default for graphics cards with that chipset. Kernel mode-Setting (KMS) is now enabled by default, and the ATI Radeon driver has now replaced “radeonhd”. The Zypper command-line package manager has had some re-work and handles dependencies in a cleaner fashion.

There are a few legitimately new things of note in 11.3 — one of which is the introduction of the high-performance and ultra-scalable Btrfs file system in experimental mode. In addition to the command-line tools for Btrfs the Yast2 GUI partitioner in openSUSE 11.3 can build and mount a Btrfs without much fuss.

Additionally, openSUSE can run with Btrfs as its root filesystem, but this is not a default configuration and the new filesystem has to be picked during Expert install. As of this time Btrfs cannot be used for /boot — that still has to be a traditional stable filesystem such as ext4.

In addition to Btrfs, openSUSE now has a lighter UI for netbooks called the Plasma Netbook Workspace, for those of you that want to try this power-users OS on a light system. Syncing movies and music with Smartphones such as the iPhone and Android devices are now supported with the Banshee Media Player which is built upon the Open Source implementation of the Mono .NET framework, Mono.

With 11.3, openSUSE also introduces a partnership with SpiderOak, a cloud-based storage system. This feature is similar to the UbuntuOne cloud that was introduced with Lucid Lynx 10.04 LTS.

While I am happy the openSUSE community has been able to give the distribution a fine sheen of polish since the last release, I do have some legitimate concerns about the project’s ongoing viability and identity.

With Novell putting itself on the market — calling into question the eventual fate of the distribution should the company and its assets be acquired by a larger, healthier entity — and with the increasing popularity of Ubuntu for end-users and enterprise use and Fedora continuing to break the leading edge for developers, openSUSE runs the risk of becoming a “second system” or a 3rd-place status.

This fate of marginalization is virtually guaranteed unless it figures out how to distinguish itself from all the rest of the distributions out there or gains greater independence from Novell, whose objectives for the distribution have often come into conflict with the desires of the community-at-large.

Is openSUSE it a power-user’s OS? Is it developer-centric? Is it for regular end-users like Ubuntu? Is it a desktop or a server? It also doesn’t help that the distribution no longer has a community leader and Novell has yet to announce a replacement, as Joe “Zonker” Brockmeier resigned from Novell some months ago.

I’ve also been observing the discussions on the openSUSE developer lists and to say that the community is undergoing something of an identity crisis and lacking a clearly defined mission and organization would be an understatement.

Despite the distribution’s political and organizational problems — ones which admittedly, I know these folks are trying very hard to address — openSUSE is still a very solid Linux distribution, albeit one which is more for the experienced user than the newbie. KDE 4.4.4 appears to be maturing nicely and now that it is finally stable, may now actually get some significant adoption.

Have you had a chance to install openSUSE 11.3 yet? Talk Back and Let Me Know.

Kick off your day with ZDNet's daily e-mail newsletter. It's the freshest tech news and opinion, served hot. Get it.

Topics

Jason Perlow, Sr. Technology Editor at ZDNet, is a technologist with over two decades of experience integrating large heterogeneous multi-vendor computing environments in Fortune 500 companies.

Disclosure

Jason Perlow

My Full-Time Employer is IBM. I write as a freelancer for ZDNet.

Disclaimer: The postings and opinions on this blog are my own and don't necessarily represent IBM's positions, strategies or opinions.

I own no investments or direct financial instruments in the companies I write about.

Biography

Jason Perlow

Jason Perlow, Sr. Technology Editor at ZDNet is a technologist with over two decades of experience with integrating large heterogeneous multi-vendor computing environments in Fortune 500 companies. A long-time computer enthusiast starting the age of 13 with his first Apple ][ personal computer, he began his freelance writing career starting at ZD Sm@rt Reseller in 1996 and has since authored numerous guest columns for ZDNet Enterprise and Ziff-Davis Internet. Jason was previously Senior Technology Editor for Linux Magazine, where he wrote about Open Source issues from 1999 to 2008.

In his spare time, Jason is an avid amateur chef and food writer, where his work reviewing New Jersey restaurants has appeared in The New York Times. He is also the founder of the popular food web site eGullet and blogs about restaurants and cooking at OffTheBroiler.com.

Talkback Most Recent of 32 Talkback(s)

  • RE: openSUSE 11.3: The Linux Lizard Lives
    Is linux still around? After 2000 it became totally irrelevant. Nothing new under the sun with this distro, same old stuff. "Look we can be on the desktop too!" but no one wants it.

    Gentleman, start your compilers!
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Loverock Davidson
    19th Jul 2010
  • Unskilled and unaware of it
    That's the beauty of the Dunning-Kruger effect, it allows you to still feel happy about yourself in spite of having so little intellectual horsepower to rely on.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    OS Reload
    19th Jul 2010
  • RE: openSUSE 11.3: The Linux Lizard Lives
    @OS Reload
    Saying he has a "little intellectual horsepower" is being far too generous - he'd find it hard getting a job flipping burgers. Most people get bored of stupid trolling after a while but he keeps on and on. Obviously has nothing else in life to live for, how sad....
    ZDNet Gravatar
    deaf_e_kate
    19th Jul 2010
  • RE: LD
    @OS Reload

    You have to forgive LD, it is tough being isolated in that underground bunker. From some of his postings, I get the impression that a `temporal distortion field` is in effect; somehow connecting LD and his 1980's existence with the present day. For most people, they just download a binary package; but LD, insists that the only way to get a Linux install is to COMPILE it yourself. I even bet that LD is using an 8080 with 8 inch floppies. He probably connects to the internet through an old, discarded IMP too.

    Then again, perhaps LD got too close to St. Job's `reality distortion field`, and has never been the same since.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    fatman65535
    19th Jul 2010
  • RE: openSUSE 11.3: The Linux Lizard Lives
    @Loverock Davidson
    I agree wholeheartedly. Without equivalents to Cardfile and Program Manager, for example, who needs it? How are users supposed to keep track of their contacts and start programs, like Word 2.0 and even, for the luckiest ones, Mosaic? I bet Internet in a Box won't run on it, even.

    Bleh. Who needs it indeed?
    ZDNet Gravatar
    clfitz
    20th Jul 2010
  • Competency...
    @Loverock Davidson ... Repetition is likely how LD learns. Since she has no friends (how could she?), nobody is around to show the click-by-click steps to install and configure Linux.

    It's no wonder that LD doesn't like Linux, apparently somebody played a joke on her and gave her Mepis (per numerous recompile the Kernel assertions). What a cruel joke too, as LD isn't capable of grasping new concepts outside of rote memory through repetition. Again, as evidenced by her many posts.

    I've installed and configured Linux for folks with very limited PC experience - USING Linux is easy and installing/configuring is getting easier and easier (Linux MINT!), but for LD, she is lost, as nobody is there to configure her machine for her. Perhaps she needs to buy a Dell with Ubuntu pre-installed, then she'll realize that Mepis is but a distro and not what every linux looks like.

    This is what happens when you're a know-it-all - nobody wants to play nice with you and it's hard to get anyone to show you new things over and over so you can 'learn'.

    No, LD, competency is not your strong suit. You'd make a much better lawyer than tech, as it's all too easy to despise you.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    SpikeyMike
    21st Jul 2010
  • SuSE is my favorite distro.
    I hope not see it go as that would leave REHL as the only remaining enterprise quality distro. Bleh. SuSE has survived mishandling this long, maybe it can survive another shift.

    No, Ubuntu Server or any other debian derivative doesn't count in my book.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    People
    19th Jul 2010
  • RE: openSUSE 11.3: The Linux Lizard Lives
    Thanks for taking the time up front to provide a quality demo so as to not waste everyone's time. This is a really long demo and I'd hate to have to spend my entire lunch break watching something not terribly informative. Oh, wait, no, the other thing, "If I had prepared for this stupid demo..." Sounds like there is a 747 idling next to the microphone, by the way. Also, maybe demo something relevant like enterprise features of the desktop? From this demo, I get the impression you don't actually use opensuse despite claiming it as your favorite. There's really a lot more to Linux than pixels and filesystems. All of the demos I've ever seen focus on trivial nonsense that no one who actually uses Linux cares about. "Oooh, see, there's a mouse cursor!" Could we maybe have some substance?
    ZDNet Gravatar
    cabdriverjim
    19th Jul 2010
  • Agreed.
    @cabdriverjim
    Dig into YaST from the CLI or something. Anything but the same ol' junk that lives on all the other platforms. We're getting the see it once, seen it again issue.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    People
    19th Jul 2010
  • ZDNet Blogger

    RE: openSUSE 11.3: The Linux Lizard Lives
    @cabdriverjim So what you're saying is you really liked the demo and the sounds of my awesome jet-engine fan assembly on my Opteron workstation. happy
    ZDNet Gravatar
    jperlow
    19th Jul 2010
  • RE: openSUSE 11.3: The Linux Lizard Lives
    @jperlow Why yes, yes I did. Some of it was great. Some of it was bleh. I miss what wasn't there the most. The fan noise was just a distraction, though. Mostly, I feel like demos of this sort get stuck on showing that the system does exactly what you'd expect it to do and nothing surprising or new. There seems to be this Linux demo template everyone follows that ends up being empty on information. I feel like there's an entire subculture of Linux tourists writing articles about Linux. Screenshot galleries are the perfect example. Its like taking so many photos of Hawaii just to prove you were there you didn't have the chance to enjoy being there.

    For example, I've seen a million Ubuntu demos but never one that shows that it officially supports Active Directory integration. Rarely does a demo touch on the subtleties of features between versions. The btrfs section of the demo is great and exactly the sort of thing I'd like to see. Even if its just a bugfix release, maybe explain some of the bugs that were fixed.

    Overall, though, I appreciate that someone is at least out there making demos of important distros.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    cabdriverjim
    19th Jul 2010
  • RE: openSUSE 11.3: The Linux Lizard Lives
    Watch The Obama Deception movie before The Joker [Obama] gets rid of it.---------------http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7886780711843120756#
    ZDNet Gravatar
    max597
    19th Jul 2010
  • Will do.
    @max597

    Thanks.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    People
    19th Jul 2010
  • Keep wearing the Tin Foil...
    @People & max597...
    ZDNet Gravatar
    Snooki_smoosh_smoosh
    19th Jul 2010
    • Flagged
  • No compelling reason to upgrade -have too much installed
    I will stay with 11.2 until I know for sure that upgrading will not break my existing stuff.
    I hope I am the prototype of home users who aren't using Opensuse / linux at home because they want to play with Linux, but who are actually using various open source applications and are loving it.

    I am not a linux zealot, in fact to use my scanner I have VMplayer running on my opensuse 11.2 host and winxp as the guest.
    ZDNet Gravatar
    kpthottam@...
    19th Jul 2010

Talkback - Tell Us What You Think

Formatting +
BB Codes - Note: HTML is not supported in forums
  • [b] Bold [/b]
  • [i] Italic [/i]
  • [u] Underline [/u]
  • [s] Strikethrough [/s]
  • [q] "Quote" [/q]
  • [ol][*] 1. Ordered List [/ol]
  • [ul][*] · Unordered List [/ul]
  • [pre] Preformat [/pre]
  • [quote] "Blockquote" [/quote]

The best of ZDNet, delivered

ZDNet Newsletters

Get the best of ZDNet delivered straight to your inbox

Facebook Activity

White Papers, Webcasts, & Resources