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1LABS GALLERY: OpenSUSE 11.2 Effectively Integrates New Features, Installation Options Are Confusing
2Block-Level Encryption
3Home Directory Encryption
4Partition Guidance
Unlike Ubuntu and Fedora, OpenSUSE offers users a check-box option of creating a separate home partition. This can be handy for preserving user data while switching among distributions or versions. I also noted that when I opted for a partitioning setup based on LVM (Logical Volume Management), the OpenSUSE installer suggested adequate root and home partition sizes, leaving the rest of the disk open for other uses.
5New Partitioning Tools
6Yastie
7Community Repositories
8More Community Repositories
9Webpin
Also on the community software repository front, OpenSUSE 11.2 includes a tool for searching for packages hosted at the OpenSUSE Build Service that may not exist in your subscribed repositories. However, right up to a couple days before the OpenSUSE 11.2 launch, this feature was not working for 11.2, as the back-end Web service on which it relies (visible in the background of this image) hadn’t been updated to support the new version.
10One-Click Install
11More One Click
12PackageKit
13Software Installer Confusion
If all the different software installation options I’ve mentioned seem confusing to you, you’re not alone. The OpenSUSE team seems to have layered on new tools without removing the old ones, leading to odd spots in the product. For example, in this right-click menu, two different software install tools vie for your attention, alongside a good old archive extractor.
14More Confusion
I prefer yet another software management option—the excellent command-line-based zypper—but found, more frequently than I expected, that mysoftware update and installation operations had to wait while the service backing PackageKit went about its business in the background. The service never took too long to do its work, but these blocks added to a sense that OpenSUSE’s right hand often seemed unaware of what its left hand was doing.