R.I.P. Leap 15.4 - It was a Great One
All, With Marcus's message on the announce list, support for 15.4 has come to an end (at least the openssl3 fix made it in today). It has been another great openSUSE release. It will join SUSE 7.0, 8.0. 8.2 and 9.0 Pro, 10.0 10.3, openSUSE 11.0, 11.4 and then the Leap(s). Looking forward to 15.5 and 15.6! -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E.
David C. Rankin composed on 2023-12-06 21:30 (UTC-0600):
With Marcus's message on the announce list, support for 15.4 has come to an end (at least the openssl3 fix made it in today). It has been another great openSUSE release. It will join SUSE 7.0, 8.0. 8.2 and 9.0 Pro, 10.0 10.3, openSUSE 11.0, 11.4 and then the Leap(s).
It still has until the end of the month.
Looking forward to 15.5 and 15.6! -- Evolution as taught in public schools is, like religion, based on faith, not based on science.
Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks! Felix Miata
Le 07/12/2023 à 05:40, Bill Swisher a écrit :
On 12/6/23 20:30, David C. Rankin wrote:
Looking forward to 15.5 and 15.6!
15.5 is working swell, I have it installed on 7 computers (upgraded them from 15.4 way back when). I'm trying out Tumbleweed, slowroll, on a new machine I just put together, it seems to be doing well ao.
I was tired of upgrading leap, not that easy when you have a complex system, and now run Tumbleweed. Since "Evergreen" (remember?) Tumbleweed become a very robust distro and I fond easier to fix minor glitches from time to time than have lot of them once every two years. Next time I may use slowroll, that could fit my needs even better thanks for the good job done! jdd -- https://artdagio.fr
On Thu, Dec 7, 2023 at 9:14 AM jdd@dodin.org <jdd@dodin.org> wrote:
I was tired of upgrading leap, not that easy when you have a complex system, and now run Tumbleweed. Since "Evergreen" (remember?) Tumbleweed become a very robust distro and I fond easier to fix minor glitches from time to time than have lot of them once every two years.
Exactly the same experience here. At least on my development laptop and a couple servers. The trickier part in deploying Tumbleweed everywhere is that we do a binary install of our software (a huge package with hundreds of programs). Staying at the same version of the things that are Tumbleweed when the systems are off line and need to be updated at different times would be a logistic nightmare. So we are looking forward to slowroll. I have not had a chance to test what it currently is. It's on my list. -- Roger Oberholtzer
participants (5)
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Bill Swisher
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David C. Rankin
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Felix Miata
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jdd@dodin.org
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Roger Oberholtzer