On November 21, 2014 7:52:23 AM EST, Bruno Friedmann <bruno@ioda-net.ch> wrote:
On Fri, 21 Nov 2014 12:36:57 +0100 Henne Vogelsang <hvogel@opensuse.org> wrote:
Hello,
This has been a spiral for years now. We have too much on our
That's why we struggle to do even do the basics for everything. That's why nothing is very polished. That's why next to no new people join and a lot of people leave.
I'm Linux user since '99, although after looking at Suse's release numbers it could be that I did start with 4.4 sometime in the beginning of 1997.
In any case, I left in 2003 to rolling distros - first spent >5yrs with Gentoo, then same amount with Arch and until now with Debian (Sid).
Now I'm returning back to Suse - put 13.2 on my notebook, soon will
On Friday 21 November 2014 13.08:54 Gour wrote: plate. put
it on the desktop and then, hopefully on my Linode VPS. (I'm still considering Tumbleweed, but in any case, it's Suse).
Nope something happened during your vacation on other distribution
openSUSE has appear, a (still) young community project. It's based on effort of (still) too few contributor's shoulder which are not payed by SUSE. Beside that, SUSE still offer to the community numerous very valuable resources and contribution.
After becoming more familiar (again) with the distro, I'll try to help as much as possible!! Try also to check the project as a whole too ;-)
For me as a contributor, the greatest part of openSUSE is 2-fold: - The do-apoly nature of package inclusion such that packages I care about get in the distro simply because I am willing to package/maintain them. - OBS - that is some great infrastructure and I suspect the glue that holds opensuse together. That it got a major set of improvements in the last year, just makes it better. Greg -- Sent from my Android phone with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, email: opensuse-project+owner@opensuse.org