SuSE Linux Enterprise Server (SLES), openSuSE Leap 42.2, and openSuSE Tumbleweed are all now available for the Raspberry Pi 3. I’m giving each of them a whirl. …read more Source:: Linux
Tag: SUSE
SUSE advances its open-source storage system
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•Besides announcing its next version of Ceph-powered SUSE Enterprise Storage, SUSE has bought openATTIC, the open-source Ceph and storage management framework. …read more Source:: Linux
SUSE Linux Enterprise 12 Service Pack 2 arrives
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•The new SLES includes improvements across the board. …read more Source:: Linux
Sweet SUSE! HPE snags itself a Linux distro
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•No one noticed but in HPE’s spin-off of its software assets, the company also tied the knot with leading enterprise Linux power SUSE. …read more Source:: Linux
Red Hat still plans on being The OpenStack company
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•Other companies — Canonical, SUSE, and Mirantis — all plan on being OpenStack powers, but Red Hat shows it’s determined to be number one with its latest OpenStack cloud release. …read more Source:: Linux
A new OpenSuse Linux is coming to town, and it’s all about stability
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•By Katherine Noyes Linux users come in many shapes and sizes, but those in the business world typically steer clear of the bleeding edge. That’s why the OpenSuse project recently switched to a …read more Source:: OpenSource
Mirantis and SUSE support multiple Linux OpenStack clouds
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•OpenStack runs on Linux, but it has many moving parts. SUSE and Mirantis want to be your cloud integrator. …read more Source:: Linux
Side-by-side: openSuSE Tumbleweed and Leap
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•openSuSE offers a development distribution, Tumbleweed, and a stable distribution, Leap. Here is a side-by-side rundown of the differences between the two. …read more Source:: Linux
SUSE Enterprise Storage 3 released for serious storage work
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•The latest release of SUSE Enterprise Server 3 comes with Ceph Jewel support. …read more Source:: Linux
The mainframe lives on in IBM’s LinuxONE
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•If you want Big Blue to run your private or hybrid cloud, IBM has the Linux software partners — Canonical, Red Hat, and SUSE — and mainframes for you. …read more Source:: Linux