On 11/24/06, Mark Shuttleworth <mark@ubuntu.com> wrote:
Novell's decision to go to great lengths to circumvent the patent framework clearly articulated in the GPL has sent shockwaves through the community.
Yes, we too are pissed about it. But most of us not probably to the extent we'd be willing to let SUSE go anywhere.
If you are an OpenSUSE developer who is concerned about the long term consequences of this pact, you may be interested in some of the events happening next week as part of the Ubuntu Open Week:
I ran Kubuntu Edgy on few systems for a week. Was really pleasantly surprised, altough few things really amazed me: - It's a desktop system in year 2006 that does not ship with any sort of netfilter (firewall) rules by default. This is huge. We need to keep the image of Linux as a secure system! Even if no services are actually enabled attack vector is still considerably bigger. Packets make it all the way to the protocol stack (versus prerouting hook). - Apt still does not support multiple architectures. There's no way around the fact that in 64bit Linux you just can't live without 32bit software (32bit nsplugins for kde, Firefox etc). That chroot thingy is really a kludge around this fact. That, and there were few quality slippages such as update system offering broken x11 packages. But hey, these things happen. Anyway, will participate just out of curiosity. -- // Janne -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org