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Windows does NOT come with Flash, Adobe Acrobat, RealPlayer support either.
The only thing it does support after a default install
is WMV, MP3, and possibly Java. (Unless you prefer to use Sun's JRE).
Actually, if you think about it, if you download the SUSE 10 (non-opensource) one, you get all this pre-installed anyway. This goes against your argument
in regards to Windows.
So there's two ways.
(1) Download the OpenSUSE one, and manually install the stuff yourself. (as the link shows)
OR
(2) Download the SUSE one, and install it.
(Which already has everything you need by default).
And you don't need to spend hours to tweak anything.
So it just goes to show, you are a no clue person when
it comes to Linux.
(Its obvious because of the generalisation you make.
You assume that all Linux distros are the same, when
they are clearly not. As well you don't even know anything about SUSE)...Well done, troll.
One thing that openSUSE and SUSE 10 does not come with, is support for file formats that are considered as possible DMCA violations. For that you have to get Packman's RPMs, install them and then use your system. We only care about Flash, Real, etc. when it comes to web content.
With all the other things Linux has going for it, this is one area that needs to be addressed before John Q. Public can ever be happy using it. If he can't do the things that he takes for granted in (gasp) Windows, then he will never be a happy camper.
I installed the eval version of SuSE 10 and it's another big step in the right direction. Bootup is significantly faster and some hardware niggles on my setup have disappeared.
As advertised, MP3 playback is supported with Amarok (and RealPlayer), but other players can't do it and encoding is missing as well. That's because they simply added an Amarok backend ("engine") which uses the RealPlayer's closed-source helix library.
So Packman is still required for full MP3 support. Btw, why can Packman offer that when Suse themselves can't?
SuSE, fedora and friends on purpose stripped away MP3-support in all apps in their distro because in the US, these technologies are patented. This means, if for example SuSE want to offer it, they may have to pay royalties to the patent holders, or they can get sued. So these apps support MP3 by default, it's just patent trouble keeping some distros from including it. But lots of other distros support it by default (even the old redhat 7).
I'm glad there's no software patents here in europe *phew*.
RE[3]: "Hacking OpenSUSE"
Linux detected and installed more hardware than Windows did. The only piece of hardware it didn't install was my TV Card and Printer. With Windows XP, I had to install drivers for the TV Card, card reader, printer, wireless card, SATA driver to even start the installation, etc..
Linux's hardware support kicks Windows ass easily. Your comment just proves that you're an idiot.
RE[5]: "Hacking OpenSUSE"
Actually, unfit title and totally untrue. Installing third party components and utilities hardsly qualifies as a hack. Secondly, aside from mp3 support a fresh windows install does not come with any of the indicated packages.
Notwithstanding our disagreement about the accuracy of the title, the article is much appreciated by myself and others.
I could guide any Windows newbie through the installation of the various packages described in the article. However, I might need a couple glasses of Merlot to get through this article with them - with my sanity and hair intact! That's the unfortunate state-of-the-art with Desktop Linux. This will either change or desktop Linux will continue to languish.
"Like are the package managers broken so you can't update or something?"
Nothing like that. You can install every other SUSE package either with YaST or apt:
http://linux01.gwdg.de/apt4rpm/
You can use a script which makes everything extremely easy:
http://susewiki.org/index.php?title=Install-apt4suse
If you are a more experienced user, here is where you can find all the components of your sources.list:
ftp://ftp.gwdg.de/pub/linux/suse/apt/SuSE/10.0-i386/
Or you'll find a ready sources.list at the SUSE apt page mentioned above.
Note that apt will make installing any codec for playing DVDs, watching media streaming extremely easy.
You might also want synaptic:
# apt-get install synaptic
You should find out that you have more than 6,000 packages available.
I also want to stress once again that downloading OpenSUSE and installing the plugins afterward doesn't make any sense whatsoever: just download SUSE eval:
http://www.novell.com/products/suselinux/downloads/suse_linux/instr...
I know for a fact that pci cards based on orinoco work fine on Suse. You are probably going to need to install the non free kernel headers using Yast, and configure your card with the new network device wizard. I don't know if this will work on the live dvd. Also some wireless devices need firmware wich are only available through Yast update... With those you will have to download the firmware using a CAT first and then you can switch to wireless.
Pretty sure though that orinoco devices does not requiere such firmware. Mad-wifi devices need the non gpl headers, and I think prism cards do need the firmware. Maybe acx too, can't recall now
Hope this helpped.
* MP3 format is patented. Should use ogg.
* WMV is also
* DVD is also patented and mplayer is illegal in many countries.
* realplayer is insane, Should just use ogg.
Quite right. I believe that open source using companies like Novell and Suse should come out with a media server version of their Linux distros using ogg Vorbis. After all, it's only going to help them and this hoop jumping of using WMV and Real can't go on forever. After all, you're only supporting the people who choose to use them.
When that happens they can persuade organisations like the BBC to stream using ogg Vorbis, or even their own developed format, (people use WM just because that's what they've heard) and provide total support for it. DRM and these crap streaming formats are only going to hurt Novell's use of open source software and their business if it goes on.
As for DVDs, well, you can't play DVDs on Windows anyway.
but on windows you can buy a legal commercial dvd player software. most likely you already have one coming with your gfx or soundcard. i have 4 legal dvd player programms which all came with some peace of hardware.
as for sound formats, the best way to solve this issue is to try to get mac and windows users to use ogg. if not all my musik was aac or mp3 encoded by itunes than i would not need those formats.
Yeah, I tried using one of the free DVD playing programs that came with my a drive. I was rather annoyed when it wanted another $20 to support surround sound. I bought the drive, I bought the DVD, I bought the sound set up, etc... Why pay more money to use that program when my DVD player which cost less then any two of the other three pieces of hardware supports it out of the box?
As for Ogg, I purchased an IAudio player that supports ogg this last time around and was really pleased with it. I open the CD using the KDE audio slave and drop the ogg folder into the music folder on my machine and then copy that folder to the player which acts as a usb drive.
Could anyone help me installing nVidia 1.0-6629 driver on OpenSUSE 10.
1)press CTRL+ALT+F1 and su to root or enter your password for root directly
2)enter ¨init 3¨ ,you will get the message:¨stage 3 has been reached¨.
3) enter ¨sh <NVDIA..>¨ (substitute the real nvidia package name for <NVIDIA..>). You could also run: ¨sh <NVIDIA..> -x¨,which only substracts the source files(hint).
4) finally run: ¨sax2 -m 0=nvidia¨
(don't forget to edit the ¨/etc/X11/xorg.conf¨ file,
under 'device driver' you have to change ¨nv¨ in ¨nvidia¨)
5) reboot
Could anyone help me installing nVidia 1.0-6629 driver on OpenSUSE 10.
1)press CTRL+ALT+F1 and su to root or enter your password for root directly
2)enter ¨init 3¨ ,you will get the message:¨stage 3 has been reached¨.
3) enter ¨sh <NVDIA..>¨ (substitute the real nvidia package name for <NVIDIA..>). You could also run: ¨sh <NVIDIA..> -x¨,which only substracts the source files(hint).
4) finally run: ¨sax2 -m 0=nvidia¨
(don't forget to edit the ¨/etc/X11/xorg.conf¨ file,
under 'device driver' you have to change ¨nv¨ in ¨nvidia¨)
5) reboot
Could anyone help me installing nVidia 1.0-6629 driver on OpenSUSE 10.
1)press CTRL+ALT+F1 and su to root or enter your password for root directly
2)enter ¨init 3¨ ,you will get the message:¨stage 3 has been reached¨.
3) enter ¨sh <NVDIA..>¨ (substitute the real nvidia package name for <NVIDIA..>). You could also run: ¨sh <NVIDIA..> -x¨,which only substracts the source files(hint).
4) finally run: ¨sax2 -m 0=nvidia¨
(don't forget to edit the ¨/etc/X11/xorg.conf¨ file,
under 'device driver' you have to change ¨nv¨ in ¨nvidia¨)
5) reboot
I think there is a small confusion. Actually I need to compile nVidia driver version 1.0-6629, with a patch NVIDIA_kernel-1.0-6629-02.28.2005.diff.txt on OpenSUSE 10. I can install this on SUSE 9.3 without any problem (Installer compiles and installs fine). But I'm getting a error when I try to install this on OpenSUSE 10 (think due to GCC 4). Any workaround to get this successfully install on OpenSUSE 10.
just installed Suse 10 and was realy surprised when i started gnome. it is too slow to show a background image and still move windows without *massive* jerking. i can't believe it, im running on a 3GHz box with 1GB RAM! is this gnomes fault or xorgs fault? i have the hardware accelerated nvidia drivers installed. does anyone has some insight on this?
just installed Suse 10 and was realy surprised when i started gnome. it is too slow to show a background image and still move windows without *massive* jerking. i can't believe it, im running on a 3GHz box with 1GB RAM! is this gnomes fault or xorgs fault?
Dunno. Have you enabled anything like composite or any of that stuff that doesn't actually work yet? From your description it shouldn't be that slow. Try the plain xorg drivers first and see if you still have the same problem.
RE: OT: what ever happend to gnome?
RE: OT: what ever happend to gnome?
something is wrong with your setup if it is slow like that, because even tho suse is the turtle of distros it shouldent be unbareable to use, check if stuff like dma is enabled through the hdparm -i , and like the other guy said xcomp will drag nearly any computer in the mud.
http://www.novell.com/products/suselinux/commercial.html
The eval does have the freeware but not the stuff like TextMaker or Arcad.
Why are all Suse download editions, whether eval or open, in the trashed state they are in? If you wish to download only one CD, you can if you download the iso only. If you wish to download via torrent, which is the most sensible way, you have to download all 5 CDs via torrent, requiring more than a 3 GB download. Would it be so difficult to offer one CD torrents, so people could download the CDs one at a time? Suse seriously needs to get with the program & move into this century.
Stop crying. I know for a *fact* that a torrent can pick up again where you cancelled the download, likewise, you can pick up on an FTP transmission again. And don't tell me CD 1, or whichever for that matter, would be of any use without the others... so you got no point here.


