- cross-posted to:
- linux@lemmy.ml
Björn Tantau ( @bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de ) 12•8 months ago Tja ( @Tja@programming.dev ) 2•8 months agoDieses
Kissaki ( @Kissaki@programming.dev ) English8•8 months agoGerman-based SUSE just extended long-term support for Linux Enterprise 15 until July 2037. […] 13 years from now […] that’s […] 19 years after 2018, which is when Linux Enterprise 15 was first released.
pretty good
gnutrino ( @gnutrino@programming.dev ) English5•8 months agoNot wanting to tangle with the 2038 problem yet though I see 🙂
Possibly linux ( @possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip ) English5•8 months agoI don’t think it is going to really replace it. Companies are much more likely to move to Rocky Linux or Debian.
Suse has the best music though
thingsiplay ( @thingsiplay@beehaw.org ) 4•8 months agoTotally wrong conclusion of the article. SUSE does not the same as what Red Hat did. It’s only about the name of the project in SUSE. That’s all. Its the same what Ubuntu does. You have no rights to use the name Ubuntu, if they don’t allow it. SUSE wants to do the same. It’s a name and trademark issue of a company.
Red Hat on the other hand, did something with the source code, so that people cannot use it easily or derive from it. That is a completely different and way more sinister issue than a trademark issue.
I can’t read the article, its full of non topic stuff.
drspod ( @drspod@lemmy.ml ) 2•8 months agoTotally wrong conclusion of the article.
I can’t read the article, its full of non topic stuff.
hmm
thingsiplay ( @thingsiplay@beehaw.org ) 2•8 months agoConclusion does not mean reading the entire article. There is a title, an introductory, the first paragraphs and the end of the article. I tried to read more, but that is enough to have a conclusion of the article. I think i made that clear.
Jo Miran ( @JoMiran@lemmy.ml ) 3•8 months agoThe big barrier to entry is going to be Oracle.