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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #60 : 19.10.2013 - klo:13:39 »
openSUSE 13.1 RC 1 Available: Time to Test!
11 October 2013, 3:00 pm

RC1 is here_black

It was a dark night, wind howling through the forest… Somewhere far away, a fire was burning and the smell …



Ok, forget that. RC1 is here, so stop watching and start testing!
The openSUSE 13.1 release is planned for November. In preparation, we today announce the availability of the first Release Candidate on software.opensuse.org. Grab one of the images and help us test!

Hackathon As you probably saw last month, we organized a Beta Hackathon to fix as many bugs as we could. The event was quite a success and while the report isn’t out yet (soon!) we can already tell you that over 120 people fixed about 140 bugs and screened another 440! With such numbers, you can imagine we have great expectations for our upcoming release. But the work is not done yet: there’s testing to do as not every bug has been found; and there are still some bugs left standing.

btrfs As you might remember, we called for additional testing of btrfs specifically. It won’t be the default in this release but the next generation filesystem has been making steady progress and in the last month, over 25 bugs have been found and fixed. There is still more work to be done, but btrfs should be a safe choice for openSUSE 13.1 users and a good candidate for default filesystem for the next release.

A big thank you to the volunteers who tested BtrFS and reported bugs. We have seen an increase of 5000 users using BtrFS since Beta was released, 1000 of them during last week (30-Sep to 06-Oct)!

What’s new As we’ve been in Freeze since shortly after Beta, most of the changes are bugfixes. A quick list of the major changes:

  • KDE-4.11.2
  • Gnome-3.10
  • Kernel-3.11.3 + load of btrfs fixes thanks to feedback from beta
  • snapper-0.1.7 (btrfs!)
  • nginx – finaly built properly
  • bluez5 – pulseaudio/gnome/kde integration to provide bluez5 is finally in place
  • plasma-nm – alternative gui for networkmanager in KDE was adjusted and now provides some sane usability
  • Tons of bugs fixed and closed
  • zypper dup from 12.3 should now not render the system unable to log in…
Issues/TODO
  • Fix calibre
  • Get the 4.1.2 release of libreoffice in
  • Include SDL2_ttf in distribution so 13.1 has a complete SDL2
  • And of course more bugfixing!
Testing Being a Release Candidate, these images are supposed to work flawlessly. But we are realistic and know the world doesn’t work that way. So, we ask you to help us find those pesky issues so we can fix them!

Testers can find information on how to work effectively in the openSUSE Testing wiki. You can find the current list of the most annoying 13.1 bugs here. Please help us shorten that list by re-testing the problematic areas or by fixing bugs, and we love it when you help us find new important issues!

The openSUSE 13.1 Portal has been set up but still needs lots of work. There are screenshots to take, release notes to write, and documentation to update. We also welcome help with translating it all! If you want to help describe the features coming, add to and review the Major Features page.

Screenshots of 13.1 will have to go here. There is a bit of info on taking proper screenshots.

Help promote! Promotion matters a lot, too. You can help promote our release by adding a release counter to your website. Pick a size, then link to the image with the usual tags:

http://counter.opensuse.org/small.png

http://counter.opensuse.org/medium.png

http://counter.opensuse.org/large.png

Example tags:

release counter

You can also find social media backgrounds for g+, twitter and facebook – see for more info the article about promoting openSUSE 13.1!

Thanks We’d like to thank all the hardworking Geekos for their contributions to this release. It’s hard work, creating so much awesome and green! Usually the openSUSE team at SUSE blogs Factory stats but this week we’ll include our top-10 heroes here:

Spot
Name
1
Raymond Wooninck
2
Stephan Kulow
3
Hrvoje Senjan
4
Dominique Leuenberger
5
Sascha Peilicke
6
Dirk Mueller
7
Michal Vyskocil
8
Matthias Mailänder
9
Denisart Benjamin
10
Richard Brown

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #61 : 19.10.2013 - klo:13:39 »
BetaPizza Hackaton Results
15 October 2013, 5:10 pm

Hacking into the night

Friday a week ago a Beta Pizza Hackaton took place at the SUSE offices and online. 121 people went over more than 580 bugs, screening 440 and fixing 140 of them. The contest was won by Stephan ‘coolo’ Kulow and Dominique ‘DimStar‘ Leuenberger, with top gold fixers Josef Reidinger and Michael Chang and a honorable mention for Antoine Saroufim.

The BetaPizza Party Concept Turned Hackaton Usually, the BetaPizza is as much about testing as about party. This time we added in the fixing of bugs as well! The SUSE engineers joined on Friday the 27th to catch and kill as many of these pesky little creatures as possible.

We set up some facilities:

In the various offices, a local BetaPizzaMaster made sure a common room was reserved and pizza was available at the appropriate time.

pizza David Standout geekoified

Results and winners of the bug fixing contest Let’s start our results section with some great statistics:

  • 140 fixed (19 GOLD, 4 SILVER, 0 BRONZE, 117 OTHER)
  • 440 screened (46 GOLD, 19 SILVER, 0 BRONZE, 375 OTHER)
  • 121 participants (76 employees, 45 volunteer)
As we said in the initial article announcing the event, we have some SUSE provided prizes for top contributors. An evaluation committee was established with Richard Brown (openSUSE Board member), Frederic Crozat (SLE department, openSUSE contributor) and Michal Hrusecky (openSUSE Team) as members.

It was a tough decision, but in the end, the committee selected two hackers, well known to Factory contributors, as overall winners: Stephan ‘coolo’ Kulow and Dominique ‘DimStar’ Leuenberger. The committee furthermore awarded the top contributors working on the preselected golden bugs: Josef Reidinger and Michael Chang. The committee finally decided on a Honorable mention. This one goes to Antoine Saroufim, who was helping the GNOME team a lot with testing and providing feedback regarding various bugs and crashes over IRC.

So in the end, we have three awards with following winners:

  • Winners: Stephan ‘coolo’ Kulow and Dominique ‘DimStar’ Leuenberger
  • Top gold fixers: Josef Reidinger and Michael Chang
  • Honorable mention: Antoine Saroufim
Taipei Pizza

Local experiences at the SUSE Offices Taipei kicked off the long day, opening the hangout and working from a single room. Beijing had the biggest showing with 40 participants and 18 pizza’s eliminated though part of the Pizza eaters were kicking off hackweek and didn’t participate in the hackaton. The Pizza Master David Liang reports that the team enjoyed the IRC bot which reported the results of their work and other teams echo-ed this.

The Provo team noted that being in the last timezone meant being pretty lonely. Pizza Master Scott suggested we need to set up a teleportation unit and get everybody physically in one place next time. The openSUSE team is evaluating this option and suggestions for reasonably priced teleportation devices are welcome.

More testing? All in all, we fixed lots of bugs, rid the world of some pizza (don’t worry, the world isn’t running out, and it’s easy to make) and had fun. But there’s more work to do – openSUSE 13.1 RC1 is out and we’re looking forward to more bug reports and fixes!

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #62 : 19.10.2013 - klo:13:39 »
OpenStack Havana and openSUSE
17 October 2013, 6:20 pm

OpenStack logo

Congratulations to the OpenStack community for today’s release of OpenStack Havana! This is the eighth OpenStack release and the community delivered on-time, yet again.

Packages have already made it to openSUSE Factory for those interested in testing. This OpenStack release further expands the capabilities of the industry-leading cloud software by providing improved scalability and performance, monitoring support, automated VM management and improved configuration. openSUSE 13.1 packages are available and so are packages for older openSUSE releases and for SUSE Linux Enterprise.

OpenStack Havana OpenStack Havana is the eighth OpenStack release and the second this year. It brings almost 400 new features to its users. Some highlights include:

  • Global clusters support, expand on the ‘region’ concept to deliver separate replication networks and configurable read- and write affinity. This makes it possible to now have a single Swift cluster spanning a wide geographic area
  • OpenStack Orchestration and OpenStack Metering have been moved from incubation projects into core OpenStack., Open Stack Orchestration brings automated, policy-based VM Management, while OpenStack Metering provides monitoring and statistics gathering (enabling billing) support to OpenStack.
  • Better disk performance through the use of threadpools for smoothing out latencies and other optimizations
  • Pooling memcache connection support
  • conf.d support allows splitting up the configuration over several files in a folderRC1 is here_black
Getting it openSUSE 13.1 just released its RC1 and it contains Havana packages. Note that a few late Havana packages have  been released yesterday and are currently getting packaged. If you want to use Havana or start developing for the next release, grab the fresh packages from the Build Service Cloud:OpenStack:Havana project. For SUSE Linux Enterprise 11 SP3 and openSUSE, see the OpenStack Portal page and use the packages from the Build Service.

For a quick and automated installation of OpenStack, you can use Quickstart or devstack. To get more information about OpenStack Havana, head over to the OpenStack web page and also read the release notes.

Documentation and help OpenStack Havana comes with new manuals that cover openSUSE as well. There’s a brand new “Installation Guide for openSUSE and SUSE Linux Enterprise Server” that you can use. If you notice any problems with this new guide, please report bugs using the “Log a bug against this page” link.

Contributing If you’re interested to improve OpenStack packages in openSUSE, please join the opensuse-cloud@opensuse.org mailing list and discuss on #opensuse-cloud IRC on Freenode. Like OpenStack, we use continous integration with Jenkins (see ci.opensuse.org) for development.

If you want commercial support for OpenStack, SUSE recently released version 2.0 of its enterprise OpenStack distribution SUSE Cloud.

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #63 : 21.10.2013 - klo:19:01 »
openSUSE Summit Schedule Ready!
21 October 2013, 4:00 pm

openSUSE Summit 2013 logo

As you may well know, Disney’s Coronado Springs Resort in beautiful Florida will welcome all Geekos to this year’s openSUSE Summit from November 15 to 17. This will be a great event, if the brand new schedule is any indication! It has just been made public, together with information about our keynote speakers.

The keynotes We are very excited to announce our keynote speaker for the keynote on Saturday. Mykel Alvis will speak to us about fostering better communication, a topic that is very important within openSUSE and any open source project. Mykel’s current interest lie in IT automation and he has a plethora of experience in the enterprise and open source realms as developer and consultant. Mykel has spoken at many events, including this year’s South East Linux Fest and Puppet Camp.

ossum13

The schedule Thanks to those interested in sharing their knowledge we were able to compile a great schedule with presentations and workshops. The presentation and workshop schedule is now posted on the openSUSE Summit web site. There will be systemd and image building workshops, talks about technical subjects like virtualization or building scalable web apps to more social subjects like marketing and advocacy.

We will also have a fun game or two going on during the summit, and don’t forget if you purchase a ticket in support of the event (registration and attendance is free, of course) you will receive a very nice backpack as welcome gift.

openSUSE Summit 2013 flyer

Help promote the Summit! We’ve been working on some promotional materials for the openSUSE summit. The flyer on the right you can click – and then get the source in a format you can print and hand out!!! We also have some pics you might want to put on your site, linking to the event, like the logo on the top of this article. Find it all in github.

Be there and have fun! We’re looking forward to the Summit. Getting to know one another, learning new technologies, getting hands-on in workshops – it’s fun and useful. Be there!

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #64 : 22.10.2013 - klo:19:04 »
Help test the openSUSE Release Candidates!
22 October 2013, 3:00 pm

RC1 is here_black

openSUSE made its first release candidate for 13.1 available less than two weeks ago. And with it, we issued a call for testing. If you’re interested in helping out but would appreciate a few pointers on how to do so, read on!

What do we need openSUSE uses automated testing which ensures the basic suitability and stability of our distribution images. We also have a large number of users using Factory, our development version, finding issues when they arise. But with about 6000 packages available, not every combination and usecase can be tested. What needs some extra help? We’ve laid out a few areas where your testing would be very valuable.

Real hardware installations The automated testing has limitations: it only works in a virtualized environment, precluding testing of hardware and technologies like UEFI/Secure boot. And our Factory users have a limited amount of hardware available and they’re usually only updating, not doing new installations.

So it is extremely valuable if you grab an old (or new!) laptop or desktop and do a full installation on it instead of using a virtual machine.



Upgrading and installation We’re also looking for help testing updates from 12.3 to 13.1 with both zypper dup and from the GUI in YaST; and for new installations extra testing would be worthwhile to be done with dual boot.

YaST Anything YaST related is in need of testing as we did port it to ruby! There have also been related changes like in the area of networking. For example, systemd now takes care of labeling ethernet devices instead of udev. So we would love to see you test the network, firewall, NAT and other networking functionality in YaST.

btrfs We’ve been giving extra attention to btrfs and this next generation filesystem is still a target for testing, even though it is not the default in openSUSE 13.1.

By default, only the ‘safe’ features of btrfs are enabled, including the snapshot and metadata and data integrity feature. These both offer protection against data loss. The snapshots do this by making it easy to revert files to earlier states, even bringing back removed files where needed! The (meta)data integrity feature uses error checking codes on your data to ensure your spinning rust or deep fried sand gives you back the data you stored on it the way you intended.

However, who installs btrfs now will be able to instantly benefit from the many features under development as soon as they are marked stable. Some of these include transparent compression of data, de-duplication of files and data, multi-volume drives and hot add/remove of drives part of it and various performance improvements. These features are there, but are disabled by default. However, you can already test them by adding the ‘allow_unsupported=1′ option to the btrfs module either on the kernel command line or in /etc/modprobe.d.

Other specific technologies to test On the page we’re gathering what’s new in openSUSE 13.1 you can see the major changes – which of course can use some testing. For example, we would love to see some extra attention given to the following:

bugs.png

  • Network connectivity: WiFi and bluetooth on the desktops (note that due to an update to Bluez 5, bluetooth doesn’t work very well in Plasma Desktop, an update is coming)
  • Libreoffice
  • printing
  • performance regression tests
  • btrfs of course
Testing and Reporting See the testing wiki for some info on testing. Testing is a matter of trying out some scenario’s you decided to test, for example, pairing your Android phone to your computer with Bluetooth. If it works – awesome, move on. If it doesn’t, you have to find out as much as you can about the why and use that for a bug report.

You then file the bug in bugzilla. If you have strong doubts about it being a bug or if you think it is extremely serious, you can report it on the openSUSE-factory mailing list. Even if you contact the list you should file a bug first, issues tend to get lost on the mailing list. Also, be sure to make good use of the openSUSE Testing documentation at the Testing portal, the Bug report how-to and read the Bug Reporting F.A.Q!

Triaging Bugs Another useful contribution is triaging bugs, which has the following goal:

bugs_green.png

    • a) find if it is really a bug (can be reproduced)
 

    • b) find in which component is the bug and
 

  • c) assign or cc the maintainer of that component
If you can’t reproduce a bug, the bug might have to be marked as “WORKSFORME” or “NEEDINFO” if you can’t reproduce it due to a lack of information. And in some cases, the bug report is plain wrong (“Firefox doesn’t make coffee“) and must be closed as “INVALID”. You can find more information in the bugreporting FAQ. As long as you have no rights yet to close bugs on bugzilla, you can just add your information as comments and they will be picked up by a maintainer – it is no less useful!

Bernhard, the author of openQA, has developed a nice web interface for easy bug browsing. The web interface provides a list of some random bugs. If you are interested in a specific component, then you can use the search bar and look for them. For triaging, it makes most sense to use this query, which shows bugs added in the last month, still open, and filtered on the ‘screening’ term. Once you have a random list of bugs that may interest you, go in and try to test and add information to the bug. While the real fixing is still left for the developers to do, the triaging makes it easier for them to do so and saves them time.

Thanks a lot! Finding time for testing makes a big difference. It helps ensure openSUSE 13.1 will be a great, stable, usable release ready for installation on almost half a million machines!

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #65 : 12.11.2013 - klo:22:07 »
Sneak Peek openSUSE 13.1: What we have for GNOME Users
29 October 2013, 7:30 pm



GNOME Shell GNOME 13.1Clean GNOME Shell Welcome to our third Sneak Peek of what is coming in openSUSE 13.1! You’ve already learned about the new Cloud features and YaST having been ported to Ruby and  it’s time to talk about… our desktops! We kick this off with GNOME 3.10.

Sticking with our philosophy for shipping the latest and the greatest, openSUSE 13.1 will offer GNOME 3.10 at installation. A great deal has changed since 3.6, and many new features have been added. The GNOME experience is now more coherent and complete with the addition of new apps and the polishing of Gnome-Shell. GNOME has become a solid desktop environment, beautiful to work in and suitable for every kind of daily operation.

GNOME Shell Changes in the shell may not be immediately apparent but they can be noticed after a short amount of use. The changes committed to gnome-shell are subtle and various but they are consistent, adhesive, and more user-friendly. Following GNOME’s philosophy of simplicity and elegance, the shell boasts several redesigned features such as a pressure-sensitive system tray, a unified system menu, and a paging app picker. That’s not all! GNOME has taken into consideration the concerns over privacy and as such , several components have been redesigned with privacy in mind.

GNOME Shell system menuGNOME Shell system menu Unified System Menu One of the things you might notice after logging in to a GNOME session, is that the separate volume, network, and status menus are gone, and instead, a single unified menu is present. The user name is no longer displayed by default for privacy reasons. You will also notice that you can no longer change your online status from the system menu. Fret not, this feature has been moved to the notification area instead. Components of the system menu will appear when they’re relevant and needed. For instance, the network icon will appear if there is a problem with your connectivity. The new system menu deals with WiFi, airplane mode, Bluetooth, and screen brightness in a more consistent manner.

Header Bar GNOME 3.10 makes use of GTK+ 3.10 which in turn offers a new feature called the Header Bar (Client-Side Decoration, CSD). The Header Bar allows application developers to merge the title bar and the toolbars into a single component, offering the user more screen space with less clutter. Presently, you no longer need to resort to the Overview or use ALT+F4 in order to close a window. The Header Bar features a close button by default and provides a more consistent look regardless of whether the window is maximized or not.

Shell_Notifications_GNOME_13.1System tray and notifications Responsive System Tray The System tray which efficiently handles the desktop’s dbus notifications has received a few refinements that would make the entire desktop seem less obtrusive and more available when needed. Previously, the system tray was triggered by docking the pointer for a few seconds at the bottom of the screen. However, this feature has been dropped in favor of pressure sensitivity. In 3.10, you’ll notice that once you apply pressure with your mouse to the bottom of the screen, the system tray would be immediately summoned. A cog icon has been added to the leftmost edge of the tray that allows the user to dismiss all notifications simultaneously. But that’s not all that icon does. The icon will change from a cog into a chat icon to indicate that the user is online once the latter launches Empathy or Polari.

Smarter Activities Overview The Activities Overview has received two new updates. The first being a more size-aware placement of the spread windows, and the second being an improved search functionality. Several search providers have been added to the shell to bring data from the core GNOME apps into the shell. For instance, it is possible to find your notes, files, contacts, documents, etc., directly from within the shell’s search window. A new search settings module in the GNOME setting dialog allows the user to control precisely what is searched, allowing the user to adjust just how much is visible in their search results.

GNOME Shell Application launcherGNOME Shell Application launcher Easier Application Launching The application launching view has been slightly modified to add a “Frequent” tab. The Frequent tab provides quick access to your most commonly used applications which could save you the time to look for them. The “All” tab shows all your currently installed and enabled applications. The application categories have been dropped in order to make space for more application icons on smaller screens. New also is how the application icons are presented. Instead of a scrollable list, they’re in a paginated view, allowing the user to scan through all the installed apps quicker and easier. Also, a new form of groups has been introduced using application “folders”. Several applications can be grouped within a folder in the “All” tab. Currently, users have to resort to the dconf-editor in order to add or remove application folders.

Web & app menu in ShellWeb & app menu in Shell Better Menus More of GNOME’s core applications have received AppMenu (Application Menu) support. What is the AppMenu? It’s a drop down menu that is triggered by clicking on the application’s icon in the top bar. Previously, the AppMenu featured a single option which was the “quit” command. Presently, the AppMenu hosts all the less used options related to the core applications. In example, the preferences and the “about” options are hosted in the AppMenu. Paired with the new cog menu present in certain applications, GNOME boasts more cohesive and less obtrusive menus, giving the user a more elegant design while not sacrificing screen space to achieve it.

Classic Applications GNOME 13.1Classic desktop in GNOME 3.10 Reinvented Classic Mode Fallback mode has been dropped in favor of using LLVM on machines without graphics acceleration. But the fans of GNOME 2 have not been abandoned. A new classic mode consisting of several extensions has been added to GNOME. The difference between the new Classic and old Fallback modes is, the former uses GNOME 3 as a basis with all it’s graphics abilities by modifying the user interface via several extensions, giving GNOME 3 the look and feel of GNOME 2. Classic Mode, although not installed by default, is available to be grabbed from the official repositories.

Improved Online Accounts Online accounts have been present in GNOME for a while but they have recently received several improvements. Several new online sources have been added including Flickr support for gnome-photos, and ownCloud support. The latter brings ownCloud integration with various GNOME components including files and calendar. Of the existing online sources, several have been improved. Most notably, 2-step verification is now supported. Chat rooms have been integrated with the Online Accounts as well.

Enhanced System Settings Various changes have been applied to the GNOME system settings. In accordance with the emphasis on privacy, privacy settings have been added to allow the user to delete usage history and to hide recently used files. It’s also possible to turn off shell search providers and hide notifications generated by certain apps. Sharing settings have been added for easier control over sharing data, and the Date & Time as well as the Display settings have received visual improvements. It is also now possible to select a custom background for the Lock Screen.

Stopwatch in ClocksStopwatch in Clocks New Core Apps Several core apps have been added to GNOME expanding its functionality. These apps are: Clocks, Notes, Weather, and Photos.

Clocks Clocks is a simple app that handles basic time-related tasks. It features an alarm, a stopwatch, and a timer, along with the ability to show the time in different cities around the world. Users can simply add or remove cities that they wish to keep track of the time in. Very handy if you have family, friends or co-workers in different parts of the world.

NotesNotes Notes Also known as Bijiben (Notebook), Notes is a simple note-taking app designed to be minimalistic and efficient. It’s possible to export and import notes to Bijiben from gnotes and tomboy as it is also possible to email your notes to your contacts. Notes makes it easy to group your notes in collections in order to make things ordered and tidy.

It has basic note-linking abilities, where you can link notes together using a chosen word or phrase. Notes also has the advantage that any text in a note is searchable from the Shell.

 

 

WeatherWeather

Weather Weather, as the name implies, is an application designed to show weather forecasts for cities chosen by the user. It predicts the weather over three days and displays temperatures in Celsius or Fahrenheit, depending on the user’s choice. Meteorological data used by weather is provided by the Norwegian Meteorological Institute. In it’s default view it shows the atmospheric conditions in the cities you have chosen, by clicking on one you’re presented with a more detailed view of that city’s current weather, including the forecast.

To install Weather type “sudo zypper in gnome-weather” in your favorite terminal

PhotosPhotos Photos Photos is an application that is designed to collect and manage the user’s photos. It can import and export images from Flickr, can create albums, and can delete images. Photos, although fully functional, has many more features planned for it including Facebook integration.

To install Photos type “sudo zypper in gnome-photos” in your favorite terminal

Technical Previews Several other apps have been introduced in 3.10. However, these apps have not met their design goals yet and as such they are released as previews. These applications include Polari, Software, Maps, Break-timer, and Music.

SoftwareSoftware Software Software centers are a necessity in modern computing and Software is GNOME’s answer to that trend. Software is a simple and elegant packagekit frontend that lists installed software, helps the user discover new software easily, installs software, and updates installed packages. By default, Software does not show duplicates, sorts applications by category, and displays a brief description and an image for every listed application. It’s main purpose is to make managing and discovering software easier for the average user. Software is not fully functional and has some pending issues, hence why it’s not a fully released application.

To install Software, type “sudo zypper in gnome-software gnome-software-appdata” in your favorite terminal. Note that the latter package will cause a few changes in the behavior of packagekit.

The new MusicThe new Music Music Unlike Software which might not be ready for daily use, Music is a stable application that does one thing and does it well; play music. It employs the tracker backend to find your music collection and then displays it under one of three views: Albums, Artists, and Songs. Music also supports search and has shell notifications.

However, despite being a stable and functional app, Music is missing a few core features such as creating playlists and employing online sources but these can be expected to come in future versions.

 

 

Maps in actionMaps in action

Maps Maps is an OpenStreetMap frontend for GNOME. It has a very minimalistic interface and supports map and satellite views, getting directions, and zooming. It uses GNOME’s geoclue backend to point the location of the user; however, it’s currently incapable of accurately pinpointing that location. Planned features to look forward to including cycling and public transport views, as well as more accurate location pinpointing abilities.

Other Changes Include:

  • Rhythmbox ported to Python 3
  • Initial Hi-DPI Support
  • Tree View for Nautilus
  • Fine scrolling support
  • Updates to the Cantarell font


  • RhythmboxRhythmbox
  • Smart Card Support
  • Magnifier Focus
  • Caret Tracking
  • Better transitions and animations
  • Greatly improved animation rendering
  • Integrated input methods
  • New default background
  • Web switched to the WebKit2 rendering engine
  • DuckDuckGo is now the default search engine with Web
  • Contacts can link contacts better than before
  • Light brown folder icons instead of grey ones
  • More settings ported to dconf from gsettings
  • various improvements to the tracker backend
  • And many more!


Tweak ToolTweak Tool Tweaking GNOME With 3.10, tweaking GNOME just got a whole lot easier. The GNOME Tweak Tool has received a major UI redesign which makes it simpler to use. In addition to providing simple methods for installing and managing extensions, shell and gtk themes, fonts, desktop icons, and the desktop background among other things, the Tweak Tool can now manage startup applications! For those who aren’t aware, extensions can radically change GNOME’s default look and functions. They can be found at extensions.gnome.org. Simply toggle an extension “on” to install it. Extensions can transform the dash to a dock, disable the activities overview, add a bottom panel, add a media or weather indicator, automate certain shell functions, and do much more! GNOME is what you make of it so stop reading, grab 13.1 and start being creative! The desktop is yours to command!

Conclusion The GNOME desktop offers a plethora of applications, a rich environment, and an unobtrusive desktop that keeps out of your way yet is available when needed. It’s easy to use right from the start and it has a unique look and feel. It’s one of the best desktops to get more done and be distracted less!

This article was contributed to by Antoine Saroufim and Robert Boudreau with help from the entire GNOME team.

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #66 : 12.11.2013 - klo:22:07 »
Board Elections Coming!
30 October 2013, 7:24 pm

GeekoVote

The end of the year is approaching. And besides Santa and fireworks, Geekos know: the openSUSE board gets a refresh! The openSUSE Election Committee has announced the time line for this year’s elections and asked candidates to step forward for the job!

Elections This year, 4 seats are to be elected, two for a two year term and two for a 1 year term. As always, all openSUSE members are eligible to vote. Anybody contributing to openSUSE over a longer period of time can become a member – if you’re not a member yet, you should apply and get your vote in!

Anybody can step up to be on the board, as long as they are openSUSE Members (and not a member of the Election Committee). You can announce your candidacy by emailing the openSUSE Project mailing list AND the Election Committee, best with a short introduction about yourself and information on why people should vote for you.

Role of the board As board member, you’re a central point of contact for openSUSE. SUSE talks to you about what they’re up to but also people in the project itself will come to the board with issues, conflicts or wishes. The board handles the regular project meetings on IRC (and once a year at the openSUSE conference) as well as trademark issues. The board works with teams like the Travel Support Team and the Marketing team, where travel- and material budgets are involved as well. Find some information about current and past board members on the wiki.

Time line for the elections For these elections, this is the time line:

  • 28.10. Start of standing up for candidacy, nominating candidates, apply for membership
  • 18.11. Start of candidates campaign
  • 2.12. Ballots open
  • 15.12. End of voting
  • 16.12. Announcement of the results
Be a part of it!

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #67 : 12.11.2013 - klo:22:07 »
openSUSE 13.1 RC2 Hits the Web, Last Chance for Testing
31 October 2013, 1:48 pm

RC2 is coming

The openSUSE 13.1 release is getting very close – just a little over two weeks, according to the Roadmap. Today, Release Candidate 2 is available on software.opensuse.org. Grab one of the images and help us test!

What’s new The changes in this update are not very big or ground shaking. This is a sign of openSUSE 13.1 maturing quickly: we focused on bug fixing. Obviously, the bugfixing hackathon helped a lot. Below is a limited list of changes (omitting most bug fixes):

  • systemd was updated to version 208
  • Shim should now work which means the secure boot is possible
  • Plasma-nm no longer replaces the knetworkmanager
  • Calibre is now fully operational
  • kernel was updated with more fixes and one speedy improvement everyone could read about on phoronix (the radeon/nouveau timer improvements)
  • In the area of virtualization the xen and libvirt packages were updated
  • A lot of migration issues were fixed so zypper dup from older release will go smoother
  • Apper should no longer choke on multiple license agreements
  • YaST parts were updated fixing bunch of installer bugs
  • XFCE can now properly suspend
  • e17 artwork was openSUSEfied (yay!)
  • Akonadi should better handle PostgreSQL as backend
  • Our vlc version was updated to 2.1 which is the latest and coolest provided
  • Translations updates
And again, this is a partial list: there are bugfixes for many issues reported by testers included.

Testing-Group-Logo

Testing openSUSE 13.1 will have to stand up right in a proud tradition of great stability so it will need a final serious workout before we release it upon the world! We wrote about testing a while ago, and we urge you to check out that article and help out!

We ask you to give some extra attention to:

  • btrfs!
  • livecd’s and usb live sticks – these did not work in RC1, which was in part because this is hard to test automatically. We have some tests set up but manual testing is really needed to ensure the live images work well.
  • Secure Boot/UEFI. If you have a machine with Secure Boot and UEFI and 12.3 didn’t work for you, please, test this 13.1 RC2. With this RC2 we added a fix related with the alignment of certificates that can cause fails on some UEFI firmware.
A list of the most annoying bugs can be found here.

Have a lot of fun!

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #68 : 12.11.2013 - klo:22:07 »
Sneak Peek openSUSE 13.1: What we have for Plasma Desktop Users
4 November 2013, 2:00 pm

Release Geeko Biting KDEA few days ago we featured a GNOME Sneak Peek and today it is time for the Blue camp! Whereas GNOME is still going through radical changes, KDE has been in incremental mode for quite a while, polishing their Plasma Desktop, Netbook interfaces and developing the new Plasma Active interface for touch devices. In this article we’ll introduce Plasma, providing a background to the choices behind Plasma and then review some of the major changes for this release.

KDE, Plasma and you For the 4.0 release of the KDE software, the desktop team concluded that they could not take what they had any further. Ugly hacks were needed to give features like ‘transparent’ panels; it was not possible to properly size some components and something like desktop widgets was done in a horrible way. Let alone that “touch-friendliness” could be added; and performance was getting problematic. Most of the hacks would not scale to high-resolution screens, multiple widgets, multi-monitor and touch solutions in the future.

Introducing Plasma The idea behind Plasma was about looking forward. In the future, devices with touch and a variety of resolutions and form factors would appear. Phones, media centers, tablets. It was clear to the developers that no single solution could work well on each of these devices. A mouse-driven interface for a desktop has vastly different interaction patterns than a touch optimized design on a phone, which is again very different from a tablet. And none compare to a ’10 feet’ interface on a television, to be controlled by a remote. UIs needed to be more than scalable; they should be able to adapt based on the form factor they are running on.

flexible widgetsflexible widgets Note that much of the competition, both Free and Proprietary, still has not fully realized this scalability–to the frustration of their users.

Building a framework for User Interfaces Instead of building a single interface, it was decided to build a framework for building user interfaces: Plasma. On top of this framework, the team would develop a traditional desktop workspace: Plasma Desktop. As an experiment, a phone workspace was written as well (Plasma Mobile) and later, Plasma Netbook was put together.

While each of these offered vastly different interfaces to the user, they shared over 90% of the underlying functionality and a totally new user experience could be developed in a matter of weeks! In a recent comment on his own blog, Sebastian Kügler calls it:

Specification, instead of dumbing down onto the lowest common denominator


Sticky window snappingSticky window snapping (click for big version) In Plasma, everything can be replaced. The pieces can transform, adapting to new interface paradigms. What is a thumb-sized button on a taskbar can turn into a full-fledged interactive widget when given a desktop to occupy. In the screenshot to the right you can see three distinct widgets: a menu, both on the panel and on the desktop; a weather widget twice on a panel, once on a small panel and a second time on a large panel; and finally a temperature widget on a panel and twice on the desktop, once big and once small.

Scripting is a part of this as well. Window manager KWin offers interesting scripts which, for example, the Sticky Window Snapping. This will move windows which have snapped together, see the animation on the right. Another script will make sure that whenever you click any of the GIMP windows, they all will come up to the front of the desktop–no more looking for that tools dialog.

Design Unlike its most prominent competitors on Linux, KDE has a focus on users who spend large amounts of time computing. As it was said by Ton, chairman of the Blender Foundation:

“If you choose to develop 3D tools to be easy to learn, you will make decisions to sacrifice speed and ease of use for frequent users. You will have to narrow down to a UI that’s optimal for generic (beginner) use cases more than for users who want to handle complexity and who have time for quality.”
This is not only true for advanced 3D modeling applications but many more. Once you sit behind a desktop for 6 or 8 hours a day you care about having an efficient workflow so you can get your work done as quickly as possible. This requires a level of flexibility and configurability Plasma Desktop can uniquely offer. Adapting and providing more options to how the user works instead of forcing him/her in a fixed workflow is where KDE software excels at. Of course, ease of use and the flexibility required for efficient working are not always at odds and the KDE team is continuing to look for ways of making things BOTH easier and faster.

pastebin animationPastebin in action (click for animation) For example, I, being a KDE user, use a workflow where I frequently share images or pieces of text over various chat channels. Having added the ‘pastebin widget’ to my main panel, sharing something is a matter of a simple drag’n'drop on this widget, and ctrl-V in the appropriate channel to share the link.

So, Plasma was designed to allow for a wide range of user interaction patterns (implemented in ‘workspaces‘), from the traditional desktop to more exotic patterns like what the GNOME team is doing with GNOME Shell. Components can be written in a variety of languages, QML currently becoming a prominent choice.

Today: long term support The Plasma Desktop and Netbook workspaces, as released a few months ago by the KDE team, is a long term support version. This because while the KDE community is slowly changing its focus on the next generation toolkit for open source development, Qt 5, they are also dedicated to keeping users of their current platform supplied with a steady stream of bug fixes.

KscreenKscreen Polishing details Being an incremental release, the Plasma workspaces bring mostly polish and stability. Plasma’s basic widgets have seen several improvements. The power management applet can now handle backlit keyboards and multiple batteries, the menu shows recently installed applications and notifications can now easily be disabled by type. The mixer application introduces a new interface and MPRIS2 support to control media players. Finally, window management has improved edge detection and quick tiling, better performance and added new animations.

This focus on stability does not mean there are no new features coming: openSUSE 13.1 comes with the new ‘kscreen’ tool for handling multi-monitor setups. It has far better defaults than the previous ‘krandr’ and remembers settings for the next time you attach an external monitor or beamer. It also has a visually-oriented, drag-and-drop interface.

There are also some more experimental features, including preliminary Wayland support and the new plasma-nm network management plasmoid, which has not been deemed fully stable but is sure worth checking out.

lining-up-transparency-slowUsing transparency to line up windows The Applications KDE develops not only the Plasma workspaces but also a wide range of applications to help you Get Stuff Done. While there, too, some efforts are going in the direction of Frameworks 5 and friends, most application developers still continue to improve the 4 series and expect to keep doing that.

In KDE PIM, the new Send Later feature in KDE’s email client allows scheduling the sending of emails on a specific date and time, also allowing repeated sending according to a specified interval. New is also scam detection and the Blogilo blogging tool has a new HTML editor.

KTouch now comes with Right-to-left support, Okular has undo/redo in forms and annotations, KStars shows interesting events coming up in your area and the math tools and games have gotten new graphics, levels and calculations.

For developers, advanced text editor Kate introduces extended language support for Python (2 and 3), JavaScript and JQuery, Django and XML with static and dynamic autocompletion, indenting, code snippets and more. kdev-python is a plugin adding Python support to the KDevelop IDE, offering code completion, on-the-fly syntax checking, interactive debugging and custom documentation of Python code.

Experiments openSUSE 13.1 is more than ‘just‘ a reliable workhorse: there’s exciting technology included. The Wayland support and the plasma-nm network management applet were already mentioned, but there is more cutting-edge technology in this release. openSUSE ships the latest Qt 5.1.1, bringing the latest stable version of this premier open source toolkit to the openSUSE users and developers. The latest QtWebkit 2.3.3 is available as well and the openSUSE KDE team also included the Lightdm KDE Greater. The Light Display Manager (LightDM) is an alternative display manager and openSUSE 13.1 adds the relevant KDE support, allowing its use in place of KDM.

With the inclusion of the Video Lan multimedia Client (VLC) in the standard openSUSE distribution, we were able to build also the phonon backend for it. This as a very strong alternative for the gstreamer backend. With openSUSE 13.2 this could become the new standard backend for Phonon. Finally, libkfbapi is a library which allows access to Facebook resources and is integrated into the KDE PIM stack.

When, where and how? Much of this awesomeness is available for openSUSE users today. For earlier versions, openSUSE 12.3 and 12.2 you can find it in the KDE repositories on OBS while it will, of course, be part of openSUSE 13.1 – coming in just a few weeks! The recent release candidate is the last chance to test these things before the are made available on November 19.

Have a lot of fun!

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #69 : 12.11.2013 - klo:22:07 »
Get Ready to Party: Release is Around the Corner!
11 November 2013, 2:00 pm

release is comingIn just a little over a week, openSUSE 13.1 will be released! As we’ve all put in serious work to make this happen, it is certainly a good cause for celebration. Time to organize Launch Parties!

Launch Parties A launch parties are to celebrate an openSUSE release. To start with the celebration part, as we all enjoy hanging out with fellow geekos, just having a space where you can talk and perhaps drink a beverage of choice should do the trick just fine. Of course, conversation starts easier if there is a subject to discuss – and that is where the release comes in! By the time the release is out, there is plenty of information on the openSUSE 13.1 Portal page that can be discussed.

Release parties are part of openSUSE. That means: they should be open, cool and featuring lots of fun! That doesn’t mean just following a ‘code of conduct‘, no, it means going out to people and being inviting! We’re all geekos, we’re all the same and we’re in this together, so we’re all responsible for each others fun.

Party time

Organizing Organizing a release party requires the following three simple steps:

    • 1. Find a space. Simple is good: perhaps a room in your university, office or a cafe or restaurant.
      • - like your local translation list or the project list… A blog can be helpful, too.
    Finally, Have a lot of fun! Welcome every new geeko and remind them that we’re all here for fun: talk to everybody you don’t know first! Perhaps a quick presentation on what is new is nice but not mandatory. Just remember: people are what makes openSUSE, so bringing them together is all that really counts.

    See this how-to for more info and tips!

    If you want to party on the release date, consider joining our G+ release day hangout!

    Have a lot of fun!

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #70 : 13.11.2013 - klo:19:00 »
Sneak Peek openSUSE 13.1: Geeko Tips
13 November 2013, 2:00 pm

WinterIsComingFinalWelcome to our fourth Sneak Peek for openSUSE 13.1! The release is getting very close and you’ve already learned about all the awesome new Cloud features, the new YaST and what our new GNOME and KDE fans will get. Today, we feature a much requested article: some in-depth Geeko Tips!

Tips? Last release, we featured a set of geeko tips for new users. If you come from Fedora, Gentoo or Ubuntu, that’s the article to read. It not only explains what all that green is about but also gives openSUSE equivalents of your familiar terminal commands and introduces you to YaST, getting software on openSUSE and more. Talking about software, we featured some interesting tips in that area with in this article about getting the latest fresh software from the Open Build Service. Finally, find some more tips and information on using the repositories on OBS and One-Click-Install in this blog post.

OWN-oxygen-Tips-and-Tricks

Going advanced In this article, we’re going a step deeper, bringing you some more tips and tricks we got from the openSUSE community.

zypper We got many zypper tips. Lots is already in the article for new geekos but we have some ‘deeper’ tips here.

Some useful commands:

  • rpmqpack – lists currently installed packages (without version)
  • rpm -qa –qf ‘%{name}-%{version}-%{release}.%{arch}\n’ – lists currently installed packages (with full version and architecture)
  • rpm -q –qf “%{DISTURL}\n” PACKAGE – gives you an OBS URL to the exact sources for the package PACKAGE. You can, for instance, check them out with osc co DISTURL
  • awk -F\| ‘$6 && $2 == “install” {print $3}’ /var/log/zypp/history – list all packages explicitly installed
  • zypper sh – runs zypper shell, no need to type zypper for each command
  • zypper -v dup -D – simulate(Dry run) an upgrade on all active repositories
  • zypper moo – makes debian users feel at home
The Geekos in Greece!The Geekos in Greece! journald journald is replacing the old logging technologies in openSUSE (at least for most common cases). The two most important commands you need to know:

  • journalctl – the old “cat /var/log/messages”
  • journalctl -f – the old “tail -f /var/log/messages”
Network installation Network install is native to openSUSE. Just use the dvd as source to install from network. This tool can help a lot for network deployments (or VMs): openSUSE-ipxe on github.

etc-update New in this release is a Gentoo tool ported to openSUSE: etc-update. This tool goes through your configuration in /etc and merges new configuration files with your own modifications automatically or presents you the differences and lets you merge the changes.

etc-update is used to merge config files in non-intrusive cli way. It goes file by file in etc, where you can show unified diff and merge the changes as whole or interactively. It can merge trivial changes by itself “-p” preen option, or you can also set the default action to take on all files “automerge, discard, …”.

[11:05]  basically you just run “etc-update” and then press numbers on what action you want to take :)

Easy OBS A major technology in openSUSE is the Open Build Service or OBS. We’ve got it running on build.opensuse.org where it servers tens of thousands of packagers building hundreds of thousands of packages for one or more of the 15+ different distributions on 8+ architectures. And this can be massively useful – to you! Information on using the repositories on OBS and One-Click-Install in this blog post, but here we’ll focus on how to use OBS to BUILD packages. A simple and graphical tutorial for re-building a package for a different openSUSE version can be found here.

For you command line aficionados interested in more deep changes, here’s the nitty gritty way of customizing/updating or rebuilding packages (we call this process BURPing). If you haven’t set the OBS tool up yet, find a how-to of your first steps with osc here.

geekos!Branch

osc bco /

Update

cd home::branches:/

Change it, fix it, break it

Test your changes with


osc build

Commit your changes to OBS with

osc ci

Request a submit of your changes

osc sr

to the Package

Fixing a package in a released openSUSE distribution and releasing it as maintenance update is as easy as that.

Branch

osc branch -M -c openSUSE:12.3

Update

cd home::branches:openSUSE:12.3:Update/

Change it, fix it, break it

Test your changes with


osc build

Commit your changes to OBS with

osc ci

Request a submit of your changes

osc mr

to the Package

And done! Yes, it really is that easy to contribute to openSUSE and make the distro better for yourself and everybody else.

That’s it for now We’re out of tips for now, but if you’ve got any – please share them below! We can use them in the next article with Geeko Tips…

Have a lot of fun!

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #71 : 18.11.2013 - klo:07:00 »
openSUSE Summit Was Geeko Awesome
18 November 2013, 6:50 am

Orlando - not so sunny

Our openSUSE Summit 2013 has just finished here in Orlando. We were hosted in a Mexican themed hotel in the area of Disney World, with our own special area setup nicely for our presentations and workshops. The location was a nice new touch for the geeko friends to reconnect and collaborate, if only because there was a large number of lizards all around here!

Weather wasn’t very loving down here in Florida, USA but being in such a family-like get together, it didn’t really matter.

Location, location location… The location of this year’s conference, Disney’s Coronado Springs Resort, has been an interesting change of scenery. The hotel features Mexican style buildings and is built around a big lake. Surroundings include several swimming pools around the room-blocks where you can spend some relaxing time after the conference is over, since the pools here  are open 24/7! Unfortunately many geekos have been so busy they didn’t swim as much as would have been good for their white skin…

Geeko Lounge

Geeko Hunt Part of our this year’s Summit was the Geeko Hunt game. Here’s how it goes:

Geeko photos were hidden around the venue and you had to go around and look for them.

Interesting and challenging idea to keep us on our feet during breaks and enhance socializing through collaboration in order to achieve the goal of finding the 20 hidden geeko heads that were around the venue.  Admittedly the geeko photos were hidden in some challenging places – people really had to make an extra efforts to find some of them.

Winner of our game, who find all the hidden geekos, was Steve! Well done, Steve :)

Social events When we, little cute geekos, want to socialize more comfortably, we lay back and relax in the Geeko Lounge.

GEEKO party

That is until the party gets started, of course! Then we are on our feet and straight into our party place – yay!

After a half-day of conference our first social event at last arrived – the pizza party on Friday night, which was where the fun started. It involved music, free drinks against geeko dollars and of course different flavors of pizza!! Pizza party has been the regular thing to do when new release occur – well, this time pizza came a little early, nobody complained though!

A Mexican evening was the second awesome party of openSUSE Summit, on Saturday night. Great opportunity to try out some mexican cuisine, wear fancy hats, drink and dance. Photos kind of speak for themselves…

DSC_0476

Sessions Now, let’s turn to the content. Plenty of good talks took place, here some notes!

Lars presented our awesome geeko infrastructure and familiarizes us with Education Li-f-e, and if you don’t know what that is, go look it up now! Jos tells us all about community building, promo and “booth’ing,” the do’s and don’ts. More advanced hands-on workshops also take place in Genie Lab, taking us down the road of systemd and image building with KIWI.

The town hall meeting couldn’t possibly be missing from this event of course! It is basically an “everybody-in-one-room-talk-about-what-matters” hour. During our town hall meeting issues like the wiki maze and the extensive communication channels we feature for the project were brought up. A few ideas were presented, such as integrating more openQA testing in the openSUSE Factory development process, adding social and game-like features to OBS to motivate our contributors and get a little more game-addiction going. Stay tuned for more info in our mailing list and share your viewpoints!

Do you know what to do to download your new favorite distro? Lars Vogdt explains all (well, almost all) about the mirrors of openSUSE in his lightning talk about MirrorBrain, a framework that makes mirroring easy. Try it out for your project!

Forum team

Have you ever used KIWI? Would you like to?

Robert Schweikert went into all the details about image building with KIWI in his 4-hour workshop that took place on Saturday 16 November. Everybody had their own laptop with the latest openSUSE version (13.1) installed. With Roberts instructions participants had the opportunity to explore the possibilities of KIWI and learn how to create their own images. For some this took a bit longer than expected, others just kept chatting it up even after the workshop was over!

If you missed the event, make sure you go through the extensive wiki about KIWI and don’t hesitate to send your question to our geeko project mailing list, where fellow geekos can guide you in the right direction for fast and easy image building with our cool community tool, KIWI.

Andrian Schröter took us for a dive into the world of OBS or Open Build Service, a useful tool developed within the openSUSE project, that can be used by anyone to package for any Linux distro.

If you would like to find out more, make sure you stay tuned for OBS workshops and presentations in future openSUSE events – we hold them regularly if you need extra help in getting started with packaging yourself.

And that’s only some of the interesting stuff going on here… There is nothing cooler than talking in person to the developers of your favorite tool!

More awesomeness? If you would like to find out more, check out the cool photos by Alex in our openSUSE Summit G+ page and stay tuned through our social media.

Big thanks goes to the organizers and volunteers of that event whose role is always substantial in making events, like the Summit happen! THANK YOU :)

Article contributed by Stella Rouzi – yes – from oSC13 fame, straight from the US of A!

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #72 : 18.11.2013 - klo:19:00 »
We’re Ready For The Release, Are You?!
18 November 2013, 2:04 pm

Release Geeko

Dear Geekos!

We’re sure you are all anxiously awaiting the release of openSUSE 13.1, coming in 24 hours. Yes, just around the corner! So we want to remind you that you can help us promote the release, plan release parties and of course read the many articles we’ve written! So much to do both before and after the release…

Before the release There is still preparation to do: a lot to read about the release -so you can tell your friends about it- and some work in order to promote the release. You are very welcome in helping us to spread the word in your blog and other places!

Learn about the release As a preparation for the release we wrote bunch of sneak peaks so you can learn about what is so cool in new openSUSE. Let’s start from the most visible parts – as always we have new versions of desktops environments. We write articles about both major ones – GNOME and KDE. Changes in these two are probably the most visible to the end user. We hope exactly the opposite happening with YaST. There were really big changes under the hood of YaST this release as we wrote. The interface and functionality are both the same, so users will barely notice, but we hope an horde of new developers attracted by the new code.

We also wrote about more hardcore/geeky stuff. "Cloud" is still a magical and cool word and we have everything you need to create your own cloud in openSUSE. Check out what is new in this area! And as this is more sysadmins cup of tea, let’s mention yet another article that we prepared. This one is full of useful tips and tricks. Even if you are skilled sysadmin, you might learn a thing or two there that will make your everyday life easier.

And last but not least, don’t forget about all the love and attention that have been put into Btrfs. Even whether is not the default option for new installations, openSUSE 13.1 looks like the best choice for everybody wanting to try this next generation filesystem.

Promote the release You might have seen that we created some cool materials to promote the release. There are banners, backgrounds for social media accounts and more in this article and we have this cool “Release Geeko” background for you:

ReleaseIsComingBackgroundRelease Geeko background Find more related artwork in our github repository.

During the release day For the release itself, we created both Facebook event and G+ event to be sure that no one forgets (like if it is possible to forget the release date of your favorite Linux distribution). But more important, there will be public hangout on G+ as part of the G+ event, so you can join and share your excitement about the new release. Apart from that, we will be updating all our social channels all day long, so don’t worry, you will not miss anything… and you are also welcome to help in these tasks.

After the release In the party department, there have been people planning launch parties already. At the moment of writing, we are already aware of parties in:

  • Orlando FL, just a couple of days ago
  • Nuremberg, punctually at the release day
  • Copenhagen, the day after
  • SUSE offices in Prague, next week
  • Zacatecas, during Free Software Lab-COZCyT
  • Taipei, in the near future (stay tuned, more information coming)
If you would like to attend a launch party in your neighborhood, check the Launch Party wiki and if there’s no party yet, read this article with some tips on solving that problem ;-)

We hope you are now a little more prepared for the release. And, of course, not forget to…

have a lot of fun!

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #73 : 19.11.2013 - klo:19:05 »
openSUSE 13.1: Ready For Action!
19 November 2013, 2:00 pm

Dear contributors, friends and fans: The release is here! Eight months of planning, packaging, adding features, fixing issues, testing and fixing more issues has brought you the best that Free and Open Source has to offer, with our Green touch: Stable and Awesome.The geeko has landed

(In other languages: cs de es fr it ja nl ru zh zh-tw)

This release did benefit from the improvements to our testing infrastructure and much attention for bug fixing. While a combination of over 6000 packages supporting 5 architectures can never be perfect, we’re proud to say this really does represent the best Free Software has to offer! The latest desktops (five of them!), server and cloud technologies, software development tools and everything in between are included as well as a number of exciting, new technologies for you to play with. Enjoy!

openSUSE 13.1 is:

Stabilized

Much effort was put in testing openSUSE 13.1, with improvements to our automated openQA testing tool, a global bug fixing hackathon and more. The btrfs file system has received a serious workout and while not default, is considered stable for everyday usage. This release has been selected for Evergreen maintenance extending its life cycle to 3 years.  

Networked

This release introduces the latest OpenStack Havana with almost 400 new features. Web server admins will appreciate the latest Apache, MySQL and MariaDB updates. Web developers benefit from an updated Ruby 2.0 on Rails 4 with improvements from core classes to better caching in the Rails framework and the latest php 5.4.2 comes with a build-in testing server. End users can now mount Amazon s3 buckets as local file system and use much improved Samba 4.1 with better windows domains support.  

Evolved

openSUSE moves forward with AArch64, making openSUSE ready for development on the upcoming generation of 64bit ARM devices. 32bit ARM support has been heavily improved and a special Raspberry Pi build for openSUSE is available. This release also delivers GCC 4.8 with new error reporting abilities, the latest glibc supporting AArch64, C11 and Intel TSX Lock Elision, the new SDL2 and Qt 5.1, bringing QML and C++11 features to developers..  

Polished

openSUSE 13.1 comes with much improved font hinting thanks to the new font engine in Freetype 2.5. YaST has been ported to Ruby, opening contribution up to a large number of skilled developers. In this release, ActiveDoc replaces doc.opensuse.org and the majority of packaged documents in openSUSE, lowering the barrier to contribution.  

Faster

New is accelerated video with VDPAU support in MESA and an optimized version of glibc for 32bit systems. Linux 3.11 includes work on ‘page reclaim’, maintaining performance during disk operations.  

Feature-full

Desktop users will appreciate the Android devices integration in the KDE file manager, in the shell and in music player Amarok. Artists have to try out the new Krita improvements with textured painting, greyscale masks & selections and more. GNOME Shell introduces a redesign of the system status bar and Header Bars in many applications, making better use of screen space. Enlightenment now also has an openSUSE theme.  

Innovative

This release comes with a number of experimental technologies to try out. This includes preliminary Wayland support with Weston compositor in GNOME Shell and KDE Plasma Desktop as well as improved support for Ultra high-resolution in applications and shells. New is also the LightDM KDE greeter and a plasma NetworkManagement applet for testing.  
“We’re proud of this release and of all those who worked on it. With a steady increase in contributors there was a lot of hard work put in by so many people from around the globe. Without all these contributors, initiatives like support for ARM would not be possible and we’re very thankful for their input.”
– said openSUSE Board member Andrew Wafaa.

The Details For Users Plasma widgets GNOME applications E17 settings   KDE

KDE Plasma Desktop is the default in openSUSE, and the 4.11 version of this Free Desktop is a long term maintained release. This release brings speed improvements in Desktop Search, file and window management, improved multi-monitor handling, brand new delayed mail sending feature and scam detection for KDE PIM and much more. Also new is deeper Android integration in the desktop and in the Amarok music player. See this great introduction to Plasma Desktop on openSUSE 13.1.  

GNOME

This release is very significant for the GNOME community, bringing a unified system status area, geolocation features, high-resolution display support and a collection of new and improved applications including Maps, Notes, Music and Photos. See the great overview of what’s new in GNOME 3.10 on openSUSE 13.1.  

Desktop Applications

openSUSE 13.1 always offers the latest Free Desktop software including browsers, office applications and more. LibreOffice 4.1 introduces improved hyphenation and style handling, RTL support and better performance. Calligra 2.7 brings improved LATEX support and better toolboxes. Digital painting application Krita introduces a rewritten transform tool, greyscale masks and selections, new fileformat and color management support and more.    

For Admins screenshot-studio-12.3-kde PostgreSQL GNOME Boxes   Virtualization

As of this release the kvm 1.6 package is mainly just a wrapper of the binaries provided by the qemu package, a change that reflects the complete support that QEMU now provides for KVM. Xen 4.1 introduces the xl/libxl toolstack as the default. The libvirt package has been split into several subpackages, allowing users to create a libvirtd specific to their needs.  

Databases and networking

13.1 ships an updated version of MySQL Community Server with stronger encryption support, innoDB improvements for better performance, new query functions and more. The default configuration of both MySQL and MariaDB has been improved. The new 2.4 release of Apache’s httpd delivers many improvements to the Multiple Processing Modules including the ability to build them as loadable modules, asynchronous read/write support and more.  

Cloud

This release comes with various cloud technologies including the latest Havana release from OpenStack, bringing almost 400 new features. It also marks the debut of s3fs, a FUSE filesystem that allows you to mount an Amazon S3 bucket as a local filesystem. It stores files natively and transparently in S3 (i.e., you can use other programs to access the same files).    

For Developers Anjuta 3.10 Qt Creator 2.8.1 KDevelop 4.5.1   IDEs and tooling

GCC 4.8 brings new error reporting capabilities: each diagnostic emitted now includes the original source line text and a caret ‘^’ indicating the column. Together with glibc and LLVM it introduces AArch64 support.  

Languages and Libraries

This marks the first openSUSE release to ship the next incarnation of Linux’ most popular tookit, Qt 5.1. While most applications are build against Qt 4.8, developers can start to experiment with innovations like QML2. Web developers will appreciate the latest Rails 4 and Ruby 2.0 releases as well as PHP 5.4.20 which includes a build in testing server. Game developers should start to play with SDL 2, bringing Linux games into a new decade.  

Under the hood LibreOffice OpenStack YaST    Kernel

openSUSE 13.1 ships with the latest patch in the 3.11 kernel series. The brisk development pace of the world’s largest software engineering project has continued, with no less than four releases since the previous openSUSE version, bringing countless features to our users. We give you an overview of the most noticeable of those.

  • Improved page reclaim to increase responsivity under heavy IO
  • improved tracking of resources with accounting of kernel memory in the memory resource controller and detailed tracking of which pages a program writes
  • scalability improvements with NUMA policy redesign, timer-less multitasking, rwlock, mutex and SYSV IPC message queue changes
  • Introduction of Zswap, a compressed swap cache, improving performance when enabled on low-memory systems
  • Btrfs introduced stability and performance improvements, Ext4 embeds small files in inodes, XFS gained support for metadata and journal checksums. F2FS is a new flash-optimized FS
  • Preliminary support for NFS 4.2, the new TCP Tail loss probe algorithm to improve short transfer performance and a low latency network polling mechanism for servers.
  • O_TMPFILE open(2) flag for the easy creation of secure temporary files, expanded namespaces support and the “labeled NFS” ability which brings full support for SELinux on NFS
  • a new suspend power state for devices, experimental dynamic power management for all Radeon GPUs since r600 (disabled by default due to stability concerns)
   

 System Tools

  • Thanks to integration of udev in the latest systemd the labeling of ethernet devices has become persistent across reboots.
  • In the power management area, there is a new suspend power state for devices which can deal with extremely low power states (or have issues with the other suspend states) and, perhaps more relevant for laptop users, experimental dynamic power management for all Radeon GPUs since r600.
  • Both UEFI support for x86_64 hardware and support for Secure Boot enabled hardware have been improved with compatibility with more devices. Find out how to deal with UEFI and Secure Boot in the wiki.
   

Documentation

In this release, ActiveDoc replaces doc.opensuse.org and most of the packaged documents in openSUSE. ActiveDoc is a new web app which lowers the barrier to contribution to openSUSE documentation while maintaining the high quality standards and multiple formats in which documentation is available. Check it out here.  

SUSE Studio

SUSE Studio users can expect availability of openSUSE 13.1 right from the release date, and support for upgrading existing appliances shortly after. This means it will be possible to easily create your own operating system for the cloud, desktop or portable devices based on openSUSE 13.1 with a custom package selections, artwork, scripts and any other properties. You can share your appliance or also browse other’s shared appliances on SUSE Gallery.  
“The openSUSE community has again done an amazing job. There was an incredible final testing- and bug fixing push over community channels the weeks before the release. we at SUSE are proud of being part of such an innovative team of technology enthusiasts.”
– said Ralf Flaxa, VP of engineering at SUSE

Maintenance and life cycle As usual, this release will continue to receive bugfixes and security updates for at least 2 release cycles + 2 months. However, the openSUSE Evergreen team has already announced extended security and bugfix work for an additional 18 months, extending the openSUSE 13.1 maintenance life cycle to three years.

For an even more detailed feature guide visit opensuse.org/13.1.

Go, get it! Downloads of openSUSE 13.1 can be found at software.opensuse.org/131.

We recommend checking out the Release Notes before upgrade or installation.

Users currently running openSUSE 12.3 can upgrade to openSUSE 13.1 via the instructions at this link. Users who have a properly set-up Tumbleweed setup will automatically migrate to the new release without any additional effort!

Check out ARM images at the ARM wiki. Stable 13.1 based images for ARMv7 are there and will receive full maintenance alongside 13.1. ARMv6 and ARMv8 (AArch64) ports are experimental and offer no guarantee.

(the openSUSE community joined SUSECon video creativity)

Thanks! 13.1 represents the combined effort of thousands of developers who participate in our distributions and projects shipped with it. The contributors, inside and outside the openSUSE Project, should be proud of this release, and they deserve a major “thank you” for all of the hard work and care that have gone into it. We believe that 13.1 is the best openSUSE release yet, and that it will help to encourage the use of Linux everywhere! We hope that you all have a lot of fun while you’re using it, and we look forward to working with you on the next release!

About the openSUSE Project The openSUSE Project is a worldwide community that promotes the use of Linux everywhere. It creates one of the world’s best Linux distributions, working together in an open, transparent and friendly manner as part of the worldwide Free and Open Source Software community. The project is controlled by its community and relies on the contributions of individuals, working as testers, writers, translators, usability experts, artists and ambassadors or developers. The project embraces a wide variety of technology, people with different levels of expertise, speaking different languages and having different cultural backgrounds. Learn more about it on opensuse.org

Source: openSUSE News


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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #74 : 25.11.2013 - klo:19:02 »
openSUSE Admin: manage the complexity
24 November 2013, 3:56 am

In the Service Team’s Cave, where the infrastructure of openSUSE servers and services is kept running, the openSUSE Service Team was facing an issue: requests to admin@opensuse.org were managed by mail, making it hard to keep track of all the open issues and leading to coordination problems. As some requests to this list also contain log in credentials, the list itself could not have a public archive. So it is always complicated to tell people what is going on there, and even more complicated to allow interested people to subscribe. (Please note: including credentials in plain Emails is never ever a good idea – it is even not the intention of the Service Team to get such credentials. But sometimes people don’t care of just realize too late that their log files are containing stuff that should not be visible)

But openSUSE – and especially the administration of all openSUSE services – is all about collaboration and communication. So hiding in a small cave might not be a good idea if you want to get some helping hands or reach out for collaboration.

Today we made one big step forward by integrating admin@opensuse.org into the ticket system available at http://progress.opensuse.org/ ! In the first shot, this does not sound very interesting, but please remember that this service is already integrated into our authentication infrastructure, so everyone with an openSUSE account is now able to step in an check the state of public tickets (warning: tickets are private per default), create new ones a have a look at other public modules of this “openSUSE admin”-project – or become part of the team.

Just to avoid confusion: sending an Email to admin@opensuse.org is not only still possible but also the preferred way to reach us.

For coordination and to be “reachable” for all those guys hanging around at some IRC channel, we now also have a public channel on irc.freenode.net: #opensuse-admin Feel free to say hello, thank you, or ask us questions.

Source: openSUSE News



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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #76 : 08.01.2014 - klo:15:06 »
Onneksi vain meili.

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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #77 : 08.01.2014 - klo:19:51 »
Eli kannattaako nyt miten toimia ja huolestua?

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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #78 : 08.01.2014 - klo:20:13 »
Eli kannattaako nyt miten toimia ja huolestua?
No pahimmassa tapauksessa rupea tulemaan spämmiä siihen maili osoitteseen jolla tonne opensuse.org on rekisteröitynyt. Eli ei tuo nyt kauhean vakavaa ole varsinkin jos käytössä sellainen maili osoite jossa hyvät spämmisuodatukset.

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Vs: Announcing openSUSE on ARM Release Candidate 1
« Vastaus #79 : 29.03.2014 - klo:16:51 »
openSUSE Board F2F Meeting
26 February 2014, 12:08 am

The openSUSE Board has pleasure to announce the minutes from Face to Face Board meeting that happened in February 7th to 9th, 2014 in Nuremberg.

Please read carefully and see how it was productive.

http://en.opensuse.org/openSUSE:Board_meeting#Face_to_Face_Meeting_2014-02-07.2C08.2C09

Thanks to SUSE for hosting the meeting and thanks to those meeting with the board over the weekend for taking the time.

There are plenty of opportunities to help the project. The booth boxes are right around the corner and with this a reboot of the advocate and local coordinator effort.

We have also reach agreement to re-instate the reimbursement of locally produced materials. We’ll create some guidelines and a new team needs to be formed. We hope that with some modification to the TSP app both reimbursement streams can be handled in a similar way.

 

 

We all feel we got a lot of stuff sorted out and ready to roll. As always if you have questions or concerns please feel free to send a message to board at o.o

Another good reference can be find here  http://andrew.wafaa.eu/2014/02/19/opensuse-board-in-the-flesh.html

Have a great week!

The openSUSE Board

Source: openSUSE News