![]() Then, you will have set the "Clock and Time Zone", followed by the easy "Partitioning". You will also have to agree to the "License Term" to go on. The "Yast Installer" welcome screen will then open where you can set the "Language" and the "Keyboard layout". Here's my openSUSE 11 installation walkthrough - The Live CD set-up kicks off after clicking the "install" icon, of course. The process is very simple and it only requires a few steps to get the system fully installed. ![]() The installation was very straightforward that I think even my grandma can figure it out. This is the part where I'm really impressed. Memory: 2GB DDR2 RAM with 512 MB allocated to VM memory Hard Drive: Samsung 80GB ATA with 8GB allocated to VM disk So, what's up with openSUSE 11? Is it good enough to finally beat Ubuntu on the desktop? Read on to find out. My main reason for this is that I wanted to finally try out the much talked about KDE 4. ![]() I usually go for GNOME, but this time I got the KDE 32-bit edition. At first, I was still contemplating on which flavor to get since openSUSE is available in both Gnome and KDE Live CD versions. OpenSUSE 11 (Release Candidate) is out already, so it's the one that I grabbed. Since the latest version of openSUSE is about to be released and it promises some major enhancements over its predecessor, I decided to take a look at my former favorite distro to see what's been going on. However, I switched to Xubuntu as I'm more obsessed with speed and simplicity nowadays more than anything else. I have been an avid openSUSE user in the past as it worked perfectly on my main workstation. ![]()
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