lucasbytegenius
Well-Known Member
Alright, so a friend of mine noticed I was using Ubuntu 10.10 off of my flash drive on a laptop I borrowed, and we got to talking about Linux in general and the blasted strictness of the open source community and other things, and then out of the blue he said, "Try OpenSUSE". Well, I went to the download page, got the torrent, and decided to download the heavy 4.7 GB file later as I was on a 3.8 GB flash drive with Ubuntu and a 2 GB persistence file.
So I forgot about that little torrent, went on in life for a few months, played with Ubuntu, got it set up to do almost everything I needed my Windows installation to do, and then the other day I ran across that torrent while cleaning my files partition. So, I went and downloaded it in sequential trips to the library with my portable hard drive, and two days ago it completed.
I brought it home, excited, but not too excited, as I had raised my hopes up too high before with other distributions, booted up Ubuntu, made a virtual machine for OpenSUSE, and installed it inside.
The installation process was amazingly intuitive despite the advanced options for power users, and I was thrilled when it completed.
I used to like KDE, but then lately I hated it, mostly due to the fact that Kubuntu left a poor impression about it, and the light colors hurt my eyes.
When I entered the desktop environment, I was a new person. The green contrasted beautifully, and giving it a fleeting glance I proceeded directly to the user menu, and went through everything. I was both pleased and amazed at all the GUI utilities, mostly because I'm a lazy guy and have terminal-phobia, despite knowing a little besides changing directories
. But I realized the potential it had for ease of use for power users, and I saw how convenient it was to have a choice at log in of what desktop environment to log in with, without several distros (even though I know with a little work you can do the same in Ubuntu or any other distribution), and awed by how the OpenSUSE team had thought everything through as best they could, from the startup through the login, while retaining a lot of powerful options.
To tell the truth, I am floored. I am so awestruck by this distro that I'm getting rid of Ubuntu and replacing it with OpenSUSE as my primary Linux OS.
Well, if you got through that long post alive, here's what the thread is about:
Discuss OpenSUSE versus Ubuntu, name their strengths, weaknesses, and your experience with them both.
To farewell the departure of Ubuntu in my life, I've made this to say goodbye:
So I forgot about that little torrent, went on in life for a few months, played with Ubuntu, got it set up to do almost everything I needed my Windows installation to do, and then the other day I ran across that torrent while cleaning my files partition. So, I went and downloaded it in sequential trips to the library with my portable hard drive, and two days ago it completed.
I brought it home, excited, but not too excited, as I had raised my hopes up too high before with other distributions, booted up Ubuntu, made a virtual machine for OpenSUSE, and installed it inside.
The installation process was amazingly intuitive despite the advanced options for power users, and I was thrilled when it completed.
I used to like KDE, but then lately I hated it, mostly due to the fact that Kubuntu left a poor impression about it, and the light colors hurt my eyes.
When I entered the desktop environment, I was a new person. The green contrasted beautifully, and giving it a fleeting glance I proceeded directly to the user menu, and went through everything. I was both pleased and amazed at all the GUI utilities, mostly because I'm a lazy guy and have terminal-phobia, despite knowing a little besides changing directories
To tell the truth, I am floored. I am so awestruck by this distro that I'm getting rid of Ubuntu and replacing it with OpenSUSE as my primary Linux OS.
Well, if you got through that long post alive, here's what the thread is about:
Discuss OpenSUSE versus Ubuntu, name their strengths, weaknesses, and your experience with them both.
To farewell the departure of Ubuntu in my life, I've made this to say goodbye:
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