Am Mittwoch, 6. Juli 2022, 16:43:56 CEST schrieb Dan Čermák:
- Leap is the community edition of SLES. - SLES is the enterprise operating system of SUSE, with the latest release being SLE 15 which might be the last SLE. - SLED is the desktop edition of SLE, i.e. it's SLE + GNOME desktop. It is fully supported by SUSE and thus only ships the GNOME desktop. - Leap Mirco/MicroOS is based on SLE MicroOS, which is essentially a small footprint version of SLE/Leap with transaction-update and utilizes a read-only root partition. - Leap ALP is a potential community version of ALP.
So I already know what SLES, SLED, Leap and Tumbleweed is. But the differences to the others (microos, leap alp, and apparently now alp should still get as a base microos) I unfortunately still do not understand. Maybe I'm just too old for something like that. But on the one hand, the differences are not clear to me here and on the other hand, the new things seem to me completely immature. Partly even wrong assumptions are used here by ALP advocates. So how is this all supposed to work. Furthermore a lot of people are needed for it. I think SUSE does not have that. Because otherwise there would be some not understandable errors less in the SLES environment. Regards Eric