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Bothered with these Desktop icons you can't even move?

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Bothered with these Desktop icons you can't even move? 

Posted on Monday 22 December 2008

opensuse3.jpg

You probably have noticed that 2 icons -- Online Help and openSUSE -- are sitting on your user's desktop, owned as root. You cannot delete them, nor move them. Deleting them from the /usr/share/dist/desktop-files folders will not do either, they will come back.

Bug #438071 has been opened in beta, but is not yet resolved. A temporary workaround is:

gconftool-2 --set /apps/nautilus/desktop/predefined_items_dir --type string ""




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Reminder to Smolt... we want your hardware profiles!

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openSUSE
Reminder to Smolt... we want your hardware profiles!

Monday, December 22nd, 2008 by Zonker


smolt-silvers_1782.jpg

Just a quick reminder - when you install openSUSE 11.1, please be sure to run Smolt to send the hardware profile to the Smolt project. I'm looking over on the Smolt Web site and the participation seems to be a bit less than 30% in terms of people who've run Smolt vs. people who seem to have installed openSUSE and run an update.

Every bit helps, and the more hardware data the Smolt project has, the better.

You should be prompted to run Smolt the first time you run the updater. If not, you can run Smolt from the command line or run it using "smoltGui" (see the Smolt site for more info).

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Smolt I said. Schnell!
--Dietrich ;)
openSUSE
openSUSE Build Service (Fear not the Lizard--click me)

After performing a clean install of openSUSE 11.1 the other day, it left Desktop Effects turned off by default.

I decided to try enabling Desktop Effects and discovered that it had no Window Decoration.

Long story short, if you've experienced this symptom or any other, first uninstall Compiz-Fusion, Emerald, etc. and go to the openSUSE Build Bervice, search on 'compiz-git-all' and one-click install it.

Everything works fine now.

--Dietrich


SuSEGeek: Fix BCM4311/4312/4321/4322 Wireless in openSUSE 11.1 and earlier
Posted by admin on December 20th, 2008

broadcom.jpegIn openSUSE 11.1, laptops installed with the BCM4311/BCM4312/BCM4321/BCM4322 Wireless LAN cards like the Dell Inspiron 1525 do not have drivers installed and hence do not work out of the box. In Dell this Wireless card is labelled as "Dell 1395 Wireless card". Broadcom has released a linux version of its driver both 32-bit (x86) and 64bit (x86_64) editions for BCM4311, BCM4312, BCM4321 & BCM4322 Wireless cards. A 1-click install Yast Metapackage file (YMP) is available for install from Packman which makes it easy to get your wireless up and running in no time.


While this procedure is written for openSUSE 11.1, it should just work fine for openSUSE 11.0, openSUSE 10.3 as well as the 1-click install supports these versions.

Check the install Wireless module to confirm it is one of the above listed Broadcom Wireless devices.

openSUSE11_1:~ # lspci|grep -i broad
0b:00.0 Network controller: Broadcom Corporation BCM4312 802.11b/g (rev 01)

Click this 1-click installer for Broadcom-wlto download and automatically start YaST Package manager. Click Next on the installation Welcome screen and click "Customize" on the screen showing the Repository and the packages selected to install. Click Next on the repository selection and screen.

Broadcom Wireless driver install customize selection

Select repositories unselect packages not required

And finally, in the screen showing the list of packages selected to install, untick the drivers for custom Kernels like Kernel-pae, Kernel-trace & Kernel-xen (unless you use any of these Kernel versions than the default one).

This means you will untick the following:

Broadcom-wl-kmp-pae
Broadcom-wl-kmp-trace
Broadcom-wl-kmp-xen

and finally, click Next on the proposal screen. This will start adding the packman repository and download and install the required driver packages and required dependencies. Click Finish when the drivers have successfully installed on your openSUSE.
unselect packages not required installation proposal

Successful installation
Now, insert the installed wireless module

openSUSE11_1:~ # modprobe wl

Now, confirm the Kernel module is loaded on your openSUSE

openSUSE11_1:~ # lsmod | grep wl
wl                   1080320  0
ieee80211_crypt         6476  2 ieee80211_crypt_tkip,wl

Confirm with the iwconfig command:

openSUSE11_1:~ # iwconfig
lo        no wireless extensions.

eth0      no wireless extensions.

pan0      no wireless extensions.

eth1      IEEE 802.11bg  ESSID:""
Mode:Managed  Frequency:2.412 GHz  Access Point: Not-Associated
Bit Rate:54 Mb/s   Tx-Power:32 dBm
Retry min limit:7   RTS thr:off   Fragment thr:off
Power Managementmode:All packets received
Link Quality=5/5  Signal level=0 dBm  Noise level=0 dBm
Rx invalid nwid:0  Rx invalid crypt:0  Rx invalid frag:0
Tx excessive retries:0  Invalid misc:0   Missed beacon:0

You are now ready to go, you should already see your KNetworkManager adjusting itself to insert the wireless (eth1 in my laptop) into its list of active devices.

From KnetworkManager, click "New Connection" and select your wireless device (eth1) in my laptop, select your Wireless Network from the list of scanned networks (or manually enter the details if your Wireless network doesn't broadcast), click next and enter your Encryption details and click Connect & Save. You should now be up and running with your Wireless.

openSUSE11_1:~ # iwconfig
lo        no wireless extensions.

eth0      no wireless extensions.

eth1      IEEE 802.11bg  ESSID:"SKY12345″
Mode:Managed  Frequency:2.437 GHz  Access Point: 00:11:42:F3:AA:6E
Bit Rate=54 Mb/s   Tx-Power:32 dBm
Retry min limit:7   RTS thr:off   Fragment thr:off
Power Managementmode:All packets received
Link Quality=5/5  Signal level=-29 dBm  Noise level=-89 dBm
Rx invalid nwid:0  Rx invalid crypt:14  Rx invalid frag:0
Tx excessive retries:0  Invalid misc:0   Missed beacon:0

pan0      no wireless extensions.

Original story



A big Thank You to SuSEGeek for putting together this how-to!--Dietrich

SUSE against the tide

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180px-Nautilus111B5.pngSuSE was founded in Nuremberg, Germany in 1992 when the Linux kernel was still almost new. by Hubert Mantel, Burchard Steinbild, Roland Dyroff and Thomas Fehr, with the objective of distributing Slackware (based on the earlier SLS Linux from Soft Landing Systems), in sets of 40 floppies, translated into German, with the approval of Patrik Volderding, the guiding light and sole developer of Slackware.


The SuSE organisation began life as Gesellschaft für Software-und Systementwicklung mbH, which later became Software und System Entwicklung (Software and System Development), from which sprang the friendly acronym SuSE. SuSE's own distinctive version of Linux came into being with the absorption of Florian LaRoche's Jurix Linux and the development of the SuSE installer YaST in 1995, and but for a mild stutter after the collapse of the NASDAQ, has never looked back since. SuSE became the favoured distribution of Linux in Germany, and Germany was the country with the fastest uptake of Linux in Europe. By the late 90s SuSE had opened offices in the UK, Italy, the Check Republic, and the United States, and was second only to Red Hat in popularity among the growing community of Linux users.

Quick, not slick

There was always something endearing about SuSE Linux. Maybe it was the artless lizard (or is it a chameleon?) that is the SuSE logo, mascot, and general good luck charm that goes by name of 'Geeko', earnest and likeable with a kink in its tail, but definitely not slick. SuSE was always more businesslike and thorough than stylish in its choices, although this gave it a distinctive style of its own, unadorned and utilitarian, like the Lloyds building, where all the mechanical parts, pipes, lifts and escalators are visible on the outside wall.

Maybe it was that, even in the latter years of its independence, even a minimum install of a home version of SuSE Linux always entailed crouching over your CD-ROM drive waiting to eject and load an endless succession of CDs, as if the SuSE engineers were nostalgic for the good old days when a Linux installation came on a large pile of floppies. And however bare and tidy you thought your desktop was, one of those disks had always gone missing...

Or maybe it was that SuSE was Linux with a girl's name, although the correct pronounciation was something closer to a Brummie saying "buzzer", (think Ozzie Osbourne), or an Ulsterman saying "user", or as in Sousa, the late 19th century composer of music for marching bands, the Wurlitzer and the fairground.

Or maybe it's because SuSE Linux always came with endless options that you could easily tailor and configure to your own particular preferences. What was truly impressive about most things SuSE was the thoroughness and attention to detail. If you weren't happy with one way of doing things SuSE provided you with the possibility of at least three other ways to get there. Just fire up YaST, throw in a CD, and there it was - with a message entreating you to "Have fun".

Or maybe it was that from the beginning, the manual, like the logo, was so compelling, hundreds of pages filled with hard facts covering areas of Linux that the light had never seen before, and then they gave you more. Old SuSE manuals are still a perfect resource for finding your way around your system when there is some command that you have lost or forgotten.

On the downside, SuSE, unlike other popular distributions of GNU/Linux, didn't provide a freely downloadable version. This was because SuSE included proprietary add-ons, and YaST, SuSE's install manager, did not come with a free software license. SuSE could only be bought in a box, which went against the spirit, if not the law, of the emergent Linux community. But SuSE escaped the sanctions that others encountered, because it always gave back to the community.

This little piggy

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No such thing as a free Lunch Linux distro

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zdnet_logo.gifNo such thing as a free Linux distro

jbrockmeier_53x53.jpg
 by Joe Brockmeier December 20th, 2008




A few Linux distributions emphasize license freedom as a goal, but Tom "Spot" Callaway says that there's no such thing as a free Linux distro.


Callaway, Fedora's engineering manager, writes that "you'd need to do an incredibly thorough audit of every file in the system to be sure that every single file is under a known license," and the evidence says that most distros haven't actually done it.

When we find something non-free, it almost always exists in the "100% Free GNU/Linux distributions". I don't spend time checking these things out, honestly, but for example, all of them were shipping GLX under SGI's god-awful FreeB (and GLX) licensing at one point, well after Fedora and Debian both were aware of it. The number of things I have found (and continue to find) along with the surprise from upstreams when I inform them of the issues, forces me to draw the conclusion that the "100% Free" distributions are not doing proper audits (or if they are, they're not talking to the upstreams about it).


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OpenSUSE 11.1: A new license signals renewed community

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cnet.gif
OpenSUSE 11.1: A new license signals renewed community




Posted by Matt Asay
December 18, 2008 12:37 PM PST

bug_sq_110x110.jpgNovell officially released openSUSE 11.1 on Thursday, unleashing a torrent of new features like a Linux 2.6.27.7 kernel, improvements to YaST, and others. While the new features are nice, it's the improved community development process in openSUSE 11.1 that I think signals the biggest change in SUSE, starting with an upgraded license to open up SUSE to more unfettered redistribution. I caught up with openSUSE Linux community manager, Joe Brockmeier, who confirmed the importance of the revised license and focus on community development:

This release marks a major milestone for the contributor community. It's the first release to be built in the openSUSE Build Service entirely, and paves the way for much more community collaboration directly in building openSUSE. We've modified the openSUSE license to allow freer redistribution and have removed some non-free components (Agfa fonts, Sun Java, for example) and replaced them with free software components. The non-free software is still available online, but in order to try to make openSUSE the easiest Linux to use and obtain, we've taken steps to simplify redistribution.

olivebranch.jpegDespite the stick that I and others have given Novell for its community-swatting patent partnership with Microsoft, Novell clearly wants to make peace with the Linux community. These moves are big steps in that direction, but Novell has more in store, as Brockmeier told me:


We're looking forward to 11.2 already, and opening up some of our planning processes to the community as well. We're working on opening our feature tracking system and we're already having discussions on the openSUSE-project mailing list about the release schedule and trying to develop a release schedule that works as well as possible for all stakeholders. (This is not easy, given the development cycles of KDE and GNOME -- as they're hitting 3 months after one another, which makes it hard to ship the latest and greatest of both simultaneously.)
Novell has opened up its openSUSE board, but this shift in licensing and platform for openSUSE should expedite Novell's shift away from company development for openSUSE to community development. That's a good shift, and one that may well counterbalance the harm it did with its Microsoft patent agreement.

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openSUSE 11.1: The Best Gets Better!

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openSUSE

I spent the morning today downloading openSUSE 11.1 64 bit.  It was much faster than I anticipated and took about two hours to get the 4Gig DVD downloaded, md5summed, burned and about another half-hour to install.

The only glitch I had in an otherwise smooth, professional high-quality Qt install was not having the wireless drivers automatically configured for me.  Fortunately, I know the drill, had the previous set of drivers from my 11.0 install in my $HOME directory and it was two shell commands to install them and up came wireless.  This was not an 'update'--rather I chose to do a clean 'new' install.

If you've done your homework, keeping your root mount point partitioned separate from /home really saves alot of unnecessary configuring and jiggering afterwards.

A couple of things needed to be installed afterwards that the new 11.1 doesn't do for you.  Namely, it will delete during install any software it detects as being non-oss.  Which is fine given that this is open source.  During the install a license appears that you can optionally read, but gone is the EULA that traditionally forced you to [x] checkmark and agree before you could get on with the installation process.

If you haven't already done so, you 64-bit gearheads can now gloat about having 64-bit Flash and Java.  Adobe Labs recently released an alpha 64-bit flash here and just the other day SUN came across with the goods here.  Finally SUN comes through!  May the Schwartz be with you.

If you go to openSUSE's web site you can download the Nvidia 'one-click' driver installation here.

Of course, you'll need to logout and restart your X server to get the Nvidia driver to load.
At that point when you reach the Desktop, might I suggest you get yourself some TrueType eye candy?--go to the openSUSE Build Service Search page and type in 'webcore'.  It should return you a free set of Windows TrueType fonts.  Select the 'one-click' install and when done go into your Slab Menu (Computer Glyph, lower left), Control Center, Appearance, select the Fonts tab and make all Tahoma 10 pt, with Window Title Font Tahoma 10 pt Bold and Fixed Width Font Courier New.  Then set rendering to subpixel smoothing and click on the Details button at the lower right and set the Font size to 96-dpi.

There much better on the eyes, yes?  Fantastique!

Now no Linux jockey is going to live with just that--we need to wratchet up the tech volume a bit with a Virtual Machine of some kind, right?  You may opt for VMware, if you are a glutten for punishment--personally I only use it when absolutely necessary and have SUN's xVM Virtual Box 2.1 installed, which just came out yesterday by the way.

Again, if you've partitioned /home separate from root /, then put your VMs off your home directory, then reinstalling VirtualBox is just a 'sudo rpm -ivh VirtualBox-2.1.0_41146_openSUSE11-1.x86_64.rpm' away.  Be sure to go into Yast, Security, Users and Group Management and add yourself to the vboxusers group!  If you get any complaints from VirtualBox about USB problems then you might want to read this entry at their forums that resolved my issue.

If that wasn't enough to satisfy your tech thirst, try installing the nightly Mozilla build of Firefox 3.1b3pre 'Shiretoko'--see my Minefield install how-to here.

It's only been a few hours of messing and a few things I've tried have succeeded in 11.1 that I couldn't do in 11.0

You can now go into Evolution email and create and sync an address book with your Google contacts.

The NetworkManager (systray) now allows you to define and recognize a cellular modem/card--very convenient and I might add that NetworkManager also now recognizes my Nokia N95's JoikuSpot as an ad hoc access point.  Also very convenient--just start JoikuSpot and select it from the NetworkManager wireless access point list and connect like any other AP--no bluetooth--no usb cable--easy.

The Desktop sports a new green 'hue'--slightly different from 11.0, but I like it.

Outwardly everything else looks, operates the same, but I'll live with it and if I find anything noteworthy to report, you can be sure I'll write about it here.

By the way, if you are about to install 11.1, don't close that laptop lid as it causes a problem with the SaX2 routine that configures the display--leave it open Folks.

Here's a link to the release notes.

I am very proud of what the openSUSE development team have done with 11.1.  The hard dedicated work shows through and through and in terms of ease of use openSUSE is better than Ubuntu at this point in overall comprehensiveness and quality.

Hat's off to the openSUSE Development Team and the upstream developers.

--Dietrich

openSUSE 11.1 Out Now!

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Sneak Peeks at openSUSE 11.1: The Latest GNOME Desktop

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openSUSE
openSUSE News:
Sneak Peeks at openSUSE 11.1: The Latest GNOME Desktop

Tuesday, December 16th, 2008 by kdupuy9

 

In our continuing series of Sneak Peeks at openSUSE 11.1, we're introducing the newest version of the GNOME desktop into openSUSE. openSUSE 11.1 will contain the latest version of the GNOME desktop, GNOME 2.24. Not only does this new version bring with it great new features, but as always the GNOME developers in the openSUSE Project have added our own unique polish to make a truly unique, polished desktop experience.

GNOME Desktop w/ SUSE GreeterGNOME Desktop

New in GNOME 2.24

As always, a new version of GNOME means new features and enhancements that make using your computer easier. Many times, they're small features that once you start using them, you can't live without. One example is the new tabbed browsing in Nautilus, the file browser.

File Broswer with Thumbs

Communication

openSUSE 11.1's GNOME Desktop includes some of the latest and greatest in communication and organization tools in Evolution, Pidgin, and Ekiga. The newest version of Evolution contains new functionality to make anyone who sends out many similar emails a day, or those who are fans of Google's online communication tools very happy.

Evolution can now save mail as templates. Need to have a simple, standard message to send out to contacts who all ask the same question? Or do you want a standard message to send to new clients? Either way, you'll find a use for this handy feature.

Living in the Gmail universe, but don't want to lose the safety and speed of having a desktop client? Now with Evolution, your Evolution Address Book can be synchronized with Google Contacts, meaning you now have the full range of Google support: Gmail through IMAP mail support, Google Calendar which synchronizes with your Evolution Calendar, and now contacts synchronization support.

Frequent instant messengers will be happy to see that the new version of Pidgin, our multi-network instant messaging and chat client, is included.

Pidgin can connect to all of your different instant messaging clients and social networks, including AIM, MSN/Windows Live, Yahoo! IM, and MySpace Chat. Pidgin also serves as an IRC chat client, through which community support for openSUSE can be received.

What to talk with your friends or family by voice or face-to-face? Meet Ekiga, the openSUSE Internet telephony client.

With Ekiga, a compatible microphone or webcam, and an SIP account (all of which can be set up upon first running Ekiga), talking to your friends, family, or colleagues is easy and free if they're also using a SIP client. With an appropriate SIP call out plan, you can make affordable voice calls over the normal phone system, right from your computer!

Entertainment and Multimedia

When the work is done, it's time to play! openSUSE 11.1's GNOME contains some of the best multimedia playing and building applications available, from Banshee, our state-of-the-art music player; to Brasero, an innovative DVD and CD burning application which enables you to make videos from your computer burn on a DVD to share with friends and family; to F-Spot, an amazing yet amazingly simple photo organizer.

openSUSE's Banshee Media Player is incredibly powerful, yet dead-simple to use. Bring over music from another operating system, a CD collection, or an MP3 player, and Banshee will catalog and apply cover art to them all. Organize and enjoy your movies with the video playback features. Stay up to date and entertained with your favorite audio and video podcasts, or listen to one of many streaming radio stations available. You can even discover new music with Last.fm, a music social network that's built right in to Banshee.

Several new features are available in Banshee in openSUSE 11.1. Banshee now supports compilation albums. So whether it's the greatest hits of the '90s or the soundtrack to your favorite movie, Banshee now recognizes and correctly organizes compilation albums.

The developers of Banshee have taken special attention to the look and feel of Banshee. One of the areas this is most noticeable is the new Now Playing window. Although this pane is meant for showing videos, new in Banshee is that when playing audio, this window displays the album cover and song/show information, making it perfect for parties so your friends can see what's playing.

Banshee also now supports Internet Radio. The application comes pre-installed with dozens of stations already, ranging from all spectrums of music to talk. Want to add more? As long as the Internet radio stream you wish to add has a compatible stream, it's as simple as a click of the mouse in Banshee.

Managing photos on openSUSE is easy and fun with F-Spot, the photo manager. With F-Spot, you can browse your photo collection by date or tags, and making basic photo corrections is a snap. You can even export your photos to Internet photo websites, such as Flickr, Picasa, or SmugMug. F-Spot is also extend-able, with extensions written to make F-Spot even more powerful or more useful, such as an extension to export photos to Facebook. These are easily installed with just a few clicks of the mouse.

F-Spot in openSUSE 11.1 features a redesigned user interface, giving easy access and better descriptions to the photo editing tools, as well as easier access to photo metadata information in the sidebar.

Every now and then, you may have had duplicate photos show up in your library. What's more annoying than that? Having to delete each one, one by one. Now, not only does F-Spot prevent duplicate photos by detecting duplicates upon importing new photos, but with a click of a mouse, F-Spot will analyze your entire photo library for duplicates and eliminate them.

You've got music, video, and photos on your computer. But what if you want to take them off your computer once in a while? With Brasero, the CD/DVD burning utility, it's as easy as can be, and is included in openSUSE!

With Brasero you can save movies on DVDs to watch on your TV, save songs and other audio shows on CDs to play in the car, or burn ISO images onto discs.

Finally, when it's just time to have fun, there's Cheese. Cheese is a webcam studio app that, with a compatible webcam, allows you to take pictures or videos of yourself and your friends.

With Cheese, you can apply special effects to the pictures or video, and make a funny video to upload to YouTube or other video sharing website. You can even apply multiple effects, to create a unique image!

Configuration Improvements

openSUSE 11.1 features several new improvements for the GNOME desktop's administration and configuration, including further YaST integration with GNOME, setting up 3G cellular data connections, and more.

YaST Integration Improvements

Even with the improving integration of YaST into GNOME, YaST has still remained with the same button and UI structure of it's KDE counterpart, which doesn't exactly match GNOME. With openSUSE 11.1, YaST has been given a visual refresh. Now, at the top of every YaST screen is a short description of what the YaST module does, with a link to getting further help. The buttons have also been relabeled so they match the GNOME standard, meaning YaST now truly looks at home on the GNOME desktop!

Cellular Broadband Connectivity

Since openSUSE 11.0, openSUSE has been able to easily connect to cellular broadband networks (with the correct card installed in the computer). This continues for openSUSE 11.1, with NetworkManager handling the connectivity. So connecting to cell networks is nearly as simple as connecting to a WiFi hotspot.

Multi-monitor Support

Another feature that has been in openSUSE for a while is the great multi-monitor support. With a simple applet and automatic configuration of extra monitors, using more than one monitor in openSUSE 11.1 is as simple as can be.

New Login

openSUSE 11.1 includes a revamped login screen for GNOME. Simply click on your name, and enter your pasword. No more having to remember and type both usernames and passwords, it's a simple process. Plus, access accessibility and multi-monitor settings right from the login screen, making the experience more open to everyone. In addition, the background in the login screen is time sensitive: if it's midnight where you are, your screen is a pleasant dark color. If it's high noon, you're in for a bright login!

Counting Down the Days

With only days to go until openSUSE 11.1 is released and you can try these features for yourself, so get ready! Plus, there are more Sneak Peeks coming in the next few days, so stay tuned to openSUSE News for all things openSUSE!

Full story at openSUSE News

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