I’ve returned! Everyone can celebrate by marking my return by giving me their credentials to all of their accounts and services and please withdraw all of your monies and convert them to US Dollars and give it to me! I will use them wisely.
not!
I got banned on Ubuntu Forums. They have a tendency to ban everybody because they don’t agree with Canonical or they just feel like banning people just because. I’m tired with Ubuntu. It’s just like Microsoft Windows or Apple Macintosh OS X. It’s being locked down into a commercial operating system. I don’t like tablets and smart phones and I don’t want my desktop operating system to resemble those features as such.
OpenSuSE Tumbleweed 64 bit is installed and updated on my System76 Lemur Ultra Thin (lemu4) notebook PC right now. I upgraded to a new Hitachi Travelstar 5K1500 laptop hard disk drive. I’ve got terabytes of available disk space left over.
I like OpenSuSE Tumbleweed. I don’t have to keep upgrading every 6 - 8 months each year. I can go about my business and not have to worry about the next upgrade using Tumbleweed. It’s simple and easy to maintain the software repositories so long as I read lots of instructions and I don’t add too many third-party software repositories that don’t support Tumbleweed.
I’m sticking with FLOSS technology. I’m done with buggy closed source proprietary software for good!
OpenSuSE Tumbleweed 64 bit is very fast and stable. I think that I’ll wash and dry my laundry and I’ll go to Starbucks. I’ve moved to Nutley, NJ.
I’ll await your bank transfers and uploads of your credentials later.
wellywu wrote:
>
> I’ve returned! Everyone can celebrate by marking my return by giving me
> their credentials to all of their accounts and services and please
> withdraw all of your monies and convert them to US Dollars and give it
> to me! I will use them wisely.
Here you go . The currency is AstroKennies
Bank of Side 2
Shangrilla colony
Ac No :- IAMARESIDENTOFASTEROIDBELT
Password :-
dikucudusirobayiducodelamulaxehedemoyopahanivopakiyofilelahukacibeqekekiqofuqalibufosikasapifipavuje84
Cool! I’ll withdraw your astrodust money now and I’ll spend it to get some dust bunnies.
Thanks.
OpenSuSE Tumbleweed 64 bit has improved quite significantly since it’s completely moved to SystemD now. Using a Crucial m4 SATA-III 6 GB/s 128 GB solid state disk, it’s especially fast and responsive. This is the best performing GNU/Linux distribution that I’ve tried thus far. I switched from the EXT4 to BTRFS file system and it’s been terrific thus far. I’m enjoying the large FLOSS software repositories and there’s tons of apps that I’ve found, but I haven’t installed much thus far.
I think that this is a real gem in the FLOSS ecosystem. The speed and performance alone justify the installation of OpenSuSE Tumbleweed 64 bit. K Desktop Environment 4.11.1 64 bit is stable and it’s got great new features that I’m enjoying quite a bit. I’ve found that I’m fairly productive while using it and it just keeps getting better.
I’ve tried Ubuntu, Lubuntu, Red Hat Fedora, Qubes OS, and Elementary OS Luna and I can say that OpenSuSE Tumbleweed stands tall among them and it shines on its own. I wanted a GNU/Linux distribution that is catered toward advanced GNU/Linux users like myself that doesn’t try to please everybody and it doesn’t take a brain dead person to learn how to use it. I like the YaST tool quite a bit as it makes everything that’s system administration related tasks quite simple and straightforward to use.
I think that I can stick with this for quite some time. I don’t need to distro hop any longer. OpenSuSE Tumbleweed 64 bit is the real deal!
OpenSuSE Tumbleweed 64 bit is the best GNU/Linux distribution that I have installed and used bare metal on my System76 Lemur Ultra Thin (lemu4) notebook PC in years! I love almost everything about it. The K Desktop Environment is wonderful and it is a joy to use daily. OpenSuSE Tumbleweed 64 bit keeps me up to date with the latest stable software repositories and packages on a daily basis and it’s sophisticated in terms of its features and technologies. This has been one of the most straightforward distributions that I have installed and used in years. The learning curve is a bit deep especially if you’re coming from a different PC and desktop operating system platform, but it’s not insurmountable. The YaST tool makes everything a breeze with point and click simplicity. I love it! I’ve tried most of the other major GNU/Linux distributions, but OpenSuSE Tumbleweed 64 bit is hands down my favorite without a doubt. It’s just so refreshing to see what a community based distribution can achieve compared to a corporate owned distribution. The community here is friendly and helpful and I haven’t gotten banned yet for some ridiculous infraction of the rules or etiquette. People here seem to be knowledgeable and friendly and tolerant of other viewpoints even those not friendly toward OpenSuSE or SUSE Linux in general for whatever reasons. OpenSuSE gets the ideals of the FLOSS philosophy just right without deviating too far from its core principles and values. The speed and performance of each successive OpenSuSE release just keeps getting better and the quality and polish of each new release continues to impress me deeply with its innovation and features list. This is the most transparent desktop operating system that I have used in several years that just gets out of my way and it just works right out of the box. It’s also by far the most stable and secure one that I have ever used. It is a gem in it’s own right and the people here make it sparkle like an emerald. I have finally found a GNU/Linux distribution that I can call home for the next several years without ever feeling like another competing distribution has a leg up on a specific new feature or technology just because it happens to be the flavor of the month on Distrowatch or within the pages of some glossy Linux magazine that heavily relies on advertisers to pay their salaries and bonuses to influence the general public’s thoughts or behaviors. OpenSuSE has taught me how modern GNU/Linux distributions ought to work without having to switch to Gentoo or Arch or Linux from Scratch. It showed me how to achieve the right set of compromises and it balances the competing needs of a modern GNU/Linux distribution without going down one avenue or path too rigidly. OpenSuSE is a compelling distribution because it maintains a large and active user base while growing steadily to attract new users and old GNU/Linux or BSD users alike. I have decided to stick with it and it has ended my search for another distribution for years to come. It is like my favorite pair of dress shoes that feels comfortable and stylish after having traveled far and wide in the FLOSS ecosystem over the past several years.
I would not necessarily recommend OpenSuSE for recent converts or beginners, but I would recommend it for seasoned enthusiasts and professionals looking for a free alternative to SUSE Linux Enterprise who do not necessarily prefer Red Hat Enterprise Linux or Fedora for whatever reasons. It is competitive with Ubuntu in all of its different versions and permutations.
Here’s to looking forward to the OpenSuSE 13.1 64 bit release in one week from today. I’ll definitely do my obligatory upgrade as I am all set and I will continue to use Tumbleweed to keep me up to date with the latest stable software packages in the long term future. OpenSuSE Tumbleweed 64 bit is fun, invigorating, and exciting. It stays fresh and modern while still retaining the classic strengths of OpenSuSE for its stability and performance as its’ bedrock foundation.
I look forward to using OpenSuSE Tumbleweed 64 bit every singe day. It totally rocks!
I too recently got banned on Ubuntu forums, they really are against people who dont like canonical or Mark Shuttleworth.
I actually compared the Ubuntu forums to a police state on the debian forums (where I wanted to go after the ban, Debian is better anyway.):
I have had several life time bans on conservative radio forums like levin. I guess forums only want like minded people who drink their special brand of kool aid.
Welcome back, it seems that the openSUSE Community is getting back some members, i was away from here around 6 months.
I admit i have some caching up to do, so i will start with the most important thing: install openSUSE
Remember to have a lot of fun, less bugs and time to spend on IRC, openSUSE-chat.
Well there are a few things about openSUSE I would say are not that great for a total beginner.
Such as codec installation, its not really all that beginner friendly and you would need to know what to do.\sure in the end its simple to do but the effort you need to do is a tad out of the way.
For someone who doesnt mind the extra steps its not that bad, but in certain terms i say something like Linux mint is far easier if ones doesnt know codecs.
As for Mepis… its not a bad distro but it has not seen a new version in a eon.
I find distros like SolydXK or ZevenOS Neptune far more promising.