SuSE Readies Linux Upgrade for 64-Bit | eWeek

SuSE Readies Linux Upgrade for 64-Bit

Écrit par
Peter Galli
Peter Galli
Oct 6, 2003
2 minute read
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Suse linux ag is set to release its latest desktop product, SuSE Linux 9.0, with support for Advanced Micro Devices Inc.s Athlon 64 processor, giving workstation users performance enhancements available only through the 64-bit architecture.

Version 9.0, which will be available on Oct. 24, also allows easier Windows migration by supporting NT File Systems and gives technical users an early look at the enhanced capabilities of the upcoming 2.6 Linux kernel.

“We are delivering SuSE Linux 9.0 for 32-bit systems as usual, as well as for the Athlon 64-bit systems, targeted at those technical enthusiasts and desktop users who want to do things like rendering and play games,” Holger Dyroff, SuSEs general manager for the Americas, said in an interview from Oakland, Calif.

SuSE in May delivered its Enterprise Server product on AMDs Opteron platform, and, according to officials, the company has sold 1,000 licenses so far, primarily to systems resellers for their research, educational and government customers.

Version 9.0 Personal will cost $39.95. The Professional edition, which comes with five CDs, a double DVD, user guide, administration guide and 90 days of installation support, will be $79.95. The Professional version for AMD 64-bit architecture will cost $119.95.

The update will include a Linux 2.6 kernel test system, which allows users to try the upcoming kernel and see the new features it contains, including improved scheduling, advanced Linux sound architecture and greater support for power management. “[The test kernel] will probably only be used by technical enthusiasts,” Dyroff said.

Version 9.0 also will offer improved Windows integration and enhanced support for the NTFS, which lets users more easily repartition the hard disk space, he said. Dyroff said the support gives customers the opportunity to take advantage of the stability and security of Linux, while maintaining the ability to access the Windows applications.

Meanwhile, Dyroff said Linux usage is still growing and taking share from the traditional Unix operating systems rather than from Microsoft. Asked about Sun Microsystems Inc.s new Java Desktop System, he said that it is good for Linux and SuSE. “Whatever helps us to have less Solaris and Windows in the market is good for us all,” he said.

Responding to Hewlett-Packard Co.s decision last week to indemnify its customers against claims from The SCO Group for its use of Linux, Dyroff said this will help move customers and those delaying Linux adoptions to the platform. But he reiterated SuSEs stance that users should not pay for a license from SCO for indemnification, saying the Lindon, Utah, company has “no case.”

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