The update system has problems when there is a separate /boot partition. I was forced to create one when I installed an alpha because I use an LVM setup. But all the Betas botched the update by creating a new /boot directory on / (root). I had to copy the installed files (kernel, initrd, etc) to the /boot partition by hand. Not difficult, but for a newbie a real nightmare. Consider that the system boots from the /boot partition with the *not* updated* kernel, which will not find its modules. In general the update process sees just one /, all other mount points are neglected. The beta1 finally seems to give the option to add separate partitions for mount points, but it fails because it prepends /mnt to the directory set by the user. In my case, /dev/sdc1 is the /boot partition and that's what I inserted, but when I pressed OK, a popup complained that there was no /mnt/boot partition. Additionally, it is strongly needed to add the option to select on what disk grub will be installed, both to the install and update system. I, for an example, have two disks on this PC. The old one with openSuSE 10.2, and a new one for 10.3. I select in the BIOS which disk to boot from. When I installed and each time I update from DVD, I had to disconnect the old disk cable, because the kernel sees it as the first disk and will install grub there. Thanks for the otherwise excellent distro. It might reach the heights of SuSE 10.0, the best ever. Carlo Scarfoglio -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse-testing+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse-testing+help@opensuse.org