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Cake day: February 9th, 2024

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  • But, it sounds to me like it’s more adapted for smaller devices and IoT, like the Steam Deck or similar handheld devices.

    There are plenty of desktop focused immutable Linux distros. With Fedora Sikverblue/Kinoite probably being the most prominent one, but there are also Vanilla OS, the ublue distros and the one I’m personally using, (openSUSE) Aeon. NixOS technically counts too I think, but that one has it’s whole own philosophy/structure that extends way beyond just being immutable

    What were the pros and cons according to you?

    Pros: increased stability/less risk of breakage, sepaeation of base system/apps that will be more intuitive to many non-Linux users, (Flatpak) apps tend to always be the newest version
    Cons: still some smaller pain points around app integration, some flatpaks might have some features that don’t fully work or you might need to change a permission (this has gotten a lot better already though), less suited for tinkerers







  • fr0g@piefed.socialtoLinux@lemmy.mlSUSE Requests openSUSE to Rebrand
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    4 months ago

    And you really think, people who are willing and able to buy enterprise support for their Linux distro get confused by the naming?

    No, I don’t think that. I *know* that because I’m active in the community.

    OpenSuse is essentially free marketing for SUSE, nobody would know them otherwise.

    That is absolute nonsense. SUSE mostly serves large enterprise customers. That’s an entirely different demographic from people who care about Desktop Linux or setting up a home server.

    Edit:

    its market share is relatively small compared to Red Hat or Canonical.

    I’m pretty sure SUSE is bigger than Canonical.

    Editedit: According to wikipedia SUSE’s revenue is about twice as high as Canonical’s


  • No, there are good reasons for it. A lot of people get confused between SUSE and openSUSE offerings. Often SUSE customers show up in openSUSE places, because they believe that it’s a place they can get official support. And I’m sure a lot of potential customers might get confused in the same way too.
    On the flip side there are also a lot of openSUSE (adjacent) users who think SUSE is (secretly or not) making openSUSE development decisions or think they can dand SUSE to do that and that.

    So there are some good reasons to consider a rebranding, but also some speaking against it, like the less of recognition it might entail.