Hello, Am Dienstag, 30. April 2013 schrieb Ken Schneider - openSUSE:
openSUSE a.k.a. SuSE used to be one of the most stable distros available. Of late many apps have been forced on the users that were *clearly* pre-alpha. I don't remember the releases but the first major fuckup was zypper (or it's backend) that clearly was forced out before it was ready.
Now you are bashing the wrong target ;-) You forgot ZENworks / ZMD which was pushed into SUSE Linux[1] 10.1. _That_ was pre-alpha, which resulted in 10.1 being the only release with 9 (!) betas and even a "10.1 Remastered" release. IMHO even /bin/true was more useful than ZMD ;-) which also means zypper was a big improvement. I agree that the first zypper versions were far from perfect, but they were much better than ZMD (and therefore an improvement). I commiserate with the poor soul that still has to maintain ZMD for the SLE10 [2] customers... Regards, Christian Boltz [1] yes, 10.1 was still called "SUSE Linux" [2] assuming it wasn't replaced by zypper with one of the service packs (I don't know much about SLE) PS: non-random signature ;-) -- systemd is the worst thing I have seen in ten years with SuSE distributions, comparable perhaps only with zmd. [Michal Kubecek in https://bugzilla.novell.com/725917#c38] -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-factory+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse-factory+owner@opensuse.org