I'm sure everyone is sick of reading reviews of Suse 9.1 by now but perhaps this one is a little different. This is not an ordinary review in the sense that I don't provide lots of colourful screenshots, or ramble on endlessly about the included software versions and other trivial things. Written from the point of view of a Debian user trying to switch to an "easier" distribution, I concentrated on how Suse stacks up compared to some of the traditional Debian strengths.
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It still beats me that Suse and Mandrake don't licence these codecs (along with the css) and distribute them separately as they do with the flash plugin or other realmedia player. There is nothing wrong with that as long as they don't keep users from getting them elsewhere.
At least that'd help those who are just starting to get these things set-up easily.
It still beats me that Suse and Mandrake don't licence these codecs (along with the css) and distribute them separately as they do with the flash plugin or other realmedia player. There is nothing wrong with that as long as they don't keep users from getting them elsewhere.
At least that'd help those who are just starting to get these things set-up easily.