Test results for ALL OpenSUSE distros on current and older versions. On 'Job Groups' select Slowroll. Separate tests for DVD (I use) NET, etc
Report bugs on Tumbleweed and slowroll here. Needs Opensuse/Bugzilla IPV(?) login. I seem to have that
It seems hyperland is useble on tumblebeed and slowroll
Updated blog on Nvidia drivers on slowroll, tumbleweed. Good source for NVIDIA drivers
Agama is a generic browser-controlled Linux installer, although at this point is only able to install SUSE and openSUSE-based distributions. In close collaboration with the openSUSE community, we maintain the openSUSE Live ISO, which uses Agama to install several openSUSE distributions.
All OpenSUSE distros downloads. Slowroll gets major updates @ the 9th of each month. Slowroll: Continuous bug fixes and security fixes as they come in, big updates once per month. Tumbleweed: Continuous updates, bug fixes and security fixes as they come in.
The Slowroll releases are tracked and discussed here by B.M. Widermann
Describes upgrade from tumbleweed to slowroll
Statistics of build issues with Slowroll
OpenSUSE Forums, all topics with tag=slowroll
This guy seems to claim ROCM can run on Tumbleweed using Distrobox. But what is distrobox?
Mailing list for Tumbleweed and Slowroll. Search for 'slowroll' in emails to see update dates
They recommend Tumbleweed as best distro
The 470.xx driver supports the following set of GPUs - this includes GT710
Keyserver for anything linux related, not just Ubuntu
From https://en.opensuse.org/SDB:Download_help#Using_Linux: The keys themselves are directly on the DVD/CD media e.g. in /content.key files, in the “suse-build-key“ package, or in the “repodata/repomd.xml.key“ files in the update repositories.
Install VSCode on Opensuse / Tumbleweed / Suse
Rancher is the equivalent of docker desktop
Krfb is equivalent to VNC server, Krdc is equivalent to VNC client
Good review of VNC on Opensuse. This does NOT talk about KRFB for some reason
PipeWire is replacement for both PulseAudio and JACK. PipeWire was designed with a powerful security model that makes interacting with audio and video devices from containerized applications easy, with supporting Flatpak applications being the primary goal. Alongside Wayland and Flatpak we expect PipeWire to provide a core building block for the future of Linux application development. Tumbleweed started using PipeWire in August 2021.