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VMware Workstation 3.0 now available at SuSE Linux

Author: JT Smith

Posted at LWN.net: Today, SuSE Linux, the
international Open Source technology leader and solutions
provider, announced that SuSE now offers VMware Workstation 3.0.
One of the main new features of VMware Workstation 3.0 is the
support of Windows XP. Using Workstation 3.0, a virtual Windows XP
PC can be started under Linux or vice versa.

IBM adds oomph to Windows, Linux servers

Author: JT Smith

NWFusion.com has a story about IBM’s new eServer xSeries machines, which “will let
Windows and Linux shops exploit the kinds of
fault-tolerance and scalability features more
commonly found in mainframes and high-end
Unix machines.”

Category:

  • Linux

Review: SuSE 7.3 Personal: easy to love, hard to install

Author: JT Smith

by Tina Gasperson
For me, getting SuSE 7.3 Personal installed and running was a lot like having a baby — it
was painful and took a long time. But baby, am I ever happy with the result.IANAC — I am not a coder. IAAW — I am a writer. And I’m not a hardware junkie, an overclocker, or a systems
administrator. I am SU — Susie User. So if you’re looking for benchmarks and lots of numbers and statistics, I apologize in advance.

I don’t have time to play; I stuck with Mandrake 7.2 because it worked
for me. Mostly. But I kept hearing about the new KDE, and the new KOffice, and KMail and Konqueror — and I
kept thinking, I’ve gotta get those, because KMail is my number one mail program, and the version I
was using had some irritating quirks — like resurrecting deleted messages, pulling in new messages out of order, and just plain running slow.

I heard how Konqueror had made giant leaps in speed and rendering, and how KOffice was beginning to rival
other office suites. I knew I had to upgrade to a 2.4-based distribution. But neither Mandrake 8.0 or 8.1
would cooperate with a USB mouse. So I’d attempt an install, get frustrated and put 7.2 back on. I did
this four or five times, with 8.0, 8.1, mandrake-freq, and the traktopel beta. Cable connections are great
for that. Download the ISO in a couple of hours, and try it out. No commitment.

The installation

I was loyal to Mandrake because of its reputation for being “user-friendly.” I considered SuSE, having always heard good things about it from my LUG friends, but the free download and installation process seemed
cumbersome and time-consuming because there were no ISOs. And yes, I was a little bit chicken. Besides, I can’t afford to bring my system down even for a day. I have to be online; it’s my job.

Then the editors of Linux Journal
gave the product of the year award to SuSE 7.3. Not just the “distro of the year,” but the product
of the year. Had to try it. Because I still don’t have time to play, I went to Best Buy and picked up the
boxed version of SuSE 7.3 Personal.

SuSE 7.3 Personal comes with three CDs and three manuals — a quick installation guide, a configuration guide, and a applications manual with information about a wide range of programs that come with the distribution. All three are quite thin, not the unwieldy tomes that usually come packed with operating systems. Very un-intimidating. I dove right in.

It didn’t take long to know there were going to be problems when right from the start of the install my USB mouse didn’t work. With
Mandrake 8.x, I was fooled into thinking things were OK because the mouse worked during installation. Not so
with SuSE. I had to use “tab,” “space” and “enter” instead of click, click and click. I might have thrown in
the towel at this point, except that sometimes determination overpowers common sense … and then
there’s the money. For me, and I suspect the same holds true for many of you, money tends to equal
commitment. It was only $39.99 plus tax, but that was enough to drum up the perseverance needed to make it
work.

The boxed version comes with free installation support, and I thought I was going to have to use it — but I searched the knowledge base first like a good,
obedient customer. Funny how they try to encourage you to try to find the answer yourself. I’m sure most paying customers would not think to do this — they probably don’t even read the Web site, just pick up the phone. Good thing I have two computers; GUIs don’t work well without mice — I could have run
Lynx to search the knowledge base — I just didn’t want to. Using sneaker net, I was able to find the
information needed in order to “mknod” and “modprobe” my way to a working mouse. (note: SuSE took a look at my hardware configuration and suggested that next time I disable the unused onboard USB controller so it doesn’t interfere with the PCI USB controller that the mouse is plugged into.)

What is the deal with X11 configuration? Maybe it’s just me. I always cringe when it comes to that last part
of the install. It could have something to do with the fact that I never write down the settings that work.
I’m always so relieved when I finally figure them out, and I say to myself, “self, you need to write this
down
,” or at least try to remember them — but I never do. Setting up X11 with SuSE proved little different
— except for a couple of added twists: there was no driver specific to my monitor, and no matter what I did,
the configuration would not “remember” that I wanted the display set at 1024×768. It kept reverting back to
640×480.

Here’s how I got it fixed: When the first screen appears from the install CD, there are options across the bottom of the screen: [F1 — 640×480] [F2 — 800×600], etc. Yup. I chose the 1024×768 option, and from then on it worked just like I wanted it to. Odd, but I’ll take it.

Living with it

SuSE 7.3 is gorgeous. You won’t see any goofy, cross-eyed incarnations of Tux here. It’s sleek and understated. The GUI defaults needed only a little bit of tweaking. For instance, the taskbar and icons were too large for my taste, and I didn’t like the GNOME-like way it stacked the open windows in the taskbar. But that was easy enough to fix.

The default web browsers are Konqueror and Mozilla, and Netscape 6 is installed. Konqueror runs fast, renders quickly, and hasn’t “krashed” yet after four days. I was impressed by how fast it opens and displays the /home/tina directory — in Mandrake 7.2 and the old version of KDE, it took two or three times as long.

Yast, on the other hand, is slow to get started. Yast is SuSE’s own control center, package manager, and configuration tool all rolled into one. Everything good you’ve heard about it is true — it simplifies setup, updates, system checks, and administrative duties. Once you get it open, that is.

One thing I really like is the menu option to “install software package — SuSE menu,” which organizes packages according to the same tree under the “K” (start here) icon. So if I’m looking for an IRC client that didn’t come installed by default (like KVIrc), I can look for it under the “install software package — SuSE menu” before I go to the trouble of opening Yast or downloading it from the ‘Net.

Disappointing: I still have had no success at getting my Lexmark Z52 to work with SuSE, and previously with Mandrake 7.2. It works with the Mandrake 8.0 that’s installed on my laptop, with no fiddling necessary. I believe it’s a matter of getting Ghostscript configured properly, and yes, it’s a GDI printer.

A rank newbie is going to have some problems getting SuSE 7.3 Personal installed and configured. It makes me cringe to think how many people are picking this up off the shelf and expecting to just go home and load it up. Some things in SuSE 7.3 are so much easier — like setting up a network card and configuring a cable or dialup connection. But the X11 configuration is going to stop many in their tracks. No wonder SuSE says it will take four days or so for them to reply to emailed support requests.

If the neophytes can persevere, however, they’ll be richly rewarded with the excellence of SuSE 7.3 and KDE 2.2.1. This is one pretty baby, and so smart — don’t you want one of your own?

Category:

  • Linux

Sun shuns MS ‘gutter’ benchmark challenge

Author: JT Smith

The Register: “Sun’s Pet Shop Boys – reponsible for the J2EE Pet Store application – say they
won’t be drawn into a benchmark dogfight with Microsoft.

Or even a catfight.”

Introducing ext3

Author: JT Smith

“With the 2.4 release of Linux come a host of new filesystem possibilities, including Reiserfs, XFS, GFS, and others. These
filesystems sound cool, but what exactly can they do, what are they good at, and exactly how do you go about safely using them in a
production Linux environment? Daniel Robbins answers these questions by showing you how to set up these new advanced filesystems
under Linux 2.4. In this installment, Daniel takes a look at ext3, a new improved version of ext2 with journaling capabilities.” More at developerWorks.com.

Category:

  • Linux

Linux apocalypse?

Author: JT Smith

“Just a couple of years ago, the scrappy little open source operating system
called Linux was being hailed as the next big thing — and not just by political
subversives and ravers, but venture capitalists and corporations who funneled
hundreds of millions of dollars into Linux development. This was extraordinary
because Linux, and the open source community behind it, are generally
associated with exceptionally progressive fiscal ideals.” More at AlterNet.org.

Category:

  • Linux

SuSE 7.3 available for download

Author: JT Smith

It’s not showing up on all of the mirrors just yet, but the US seems to have it covered, along with others. Here’s the list of mirrors: http://www.suse.com/us/support/download/ftp/int_mirrors.html.

Category:

  • Linux

SuSE 7.3 rocks Red Hat and flips XP the bird

Author: JT Smith

The Register: “The first thing a PC user notices about SuSE is that it comes with the kind of
documentation that Microsoft has almost – but not quite – eradicated from the far
reaches of your long-term memory.

A good 800 pages worth in four manuals, such as you used to curl up with in an
easy chair, in some lost era of elegance and style before the Global Economy
obliterated any lingering, mocking hint of leisure time adequate for such strangely
attractive pursuits as getting to know your operating system.”

Category:

  • Linux

Stable SMB

Author: JT Smith

OReilly: “SMB has recently improved to the point where it is reliable enough for use in production settings. Michael Lucas tells you how to use SMB to access a Windows share from your FreeBSD workstation.”

Category:

  • Unix

Palm has a ‘Be’ in

Author: JT Smith

Kelly McNeill writes: “Since Gassee has been so close to the transition process, the rumor mill places him as a likely candidate to replace Palm CEO Carl Yankowski, who announced his resignation last Thursday. The company says it has only started the process of finding a replacement CEO and should come up with at least a short list of candidates by the end of the year. Gassee in charge certainly couldn’t hurt Palm, which has been losing market share in Europe and the U.S. to rivals Compaq and Hewlett-Packard.”