On Tue, 2009-09-08 at 09:06 +0200, Martin Schlander wrote:
Haven't followed this closely either, but the following advantages of "openSLES" over "openSUSE LTS" spring to mind.
* rebuilding SLES updates seems easier than creating your own from scratch * I guess SLES is supposed to be more stable and polished than openSUSE * A lot of stuff is certified and tested against SLES
Same reasons why CentOS has out-lived the Fedora Legacy project I guess :-)
But if you're talking about SLES, it has 7 year support cycle for each release. So again, for some of us, it's not clear. Are we talking about a free version of SLES? Or are we talking about a more stable long-term version of openSUSE? Two very different things. And two very different projects. -- Bryen Yunashko openSUSE Board Member GNOME-A11y Team Member www.bryen.com (Personal Blog) www.planet-a11y.net (Feed aggregator of the Accessibility Community) -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-project+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-project+help@opensuse.org