Ironically, as ex zealot, desilusied with the endless fragmentation of Linux distributions and desktop dream, FOSS OSes currently are looking as the only way out of American dominated consumer OSes and related programming languages.
Plus in my deep Penguin days, SuSE was one of my favourite distros, I loved yast based management, and the KDE integration.
>SusSE was one of my favourite distros
it's honestly a crime that they don't get more traction. Tooling they've put out like the Open Build Service (which is distro agnostic), is fantastic. I've been using Tumbleweed on dev machines for a long time, and the fact that they ship fully tested images is imo just a vastly better way to do a rolling release.
Their corporate support is a joke.
When we bring a problem to them, which we pay them for, the turn around time is awful, and about 2/5 cases I end up having to break out the debugging tools and root cause/fix fix it because their support engineers can't be bothered.
Especially their nVidia support. Worse than useless.
Enthusiastically agree. A point of curiosity… are you in the Americas or in Europe?
I’ve often wondered if the support is better if one is on the “correct”side of the Atlantic.
At a minimum, one would have the benefit of having time zone alignment with Engineering staff.
“We’re waiting for Engineering in Germany to get back to us.” is a common refrain.
>“We’re waiting for Engineering in Germany to get back to us.” is a common refrain.
From my experience, customer support in Germany for all types of consumer businesses, in general, is a shit joke, so that stereotype tracks. You need to contact them via a letter from a lawyer or consumer protection agencies to get them to move their ass when you have an issue, otherwise they ignore you.
In US (and UK as well) the customer is always right, in Germany the customer support is always right and the customer should apologize for daring to bother the customer support with their problem.
That's why they have no international tech companies, because their mentality can't survive in the "customer is always right" cutthroat environment.
> Their corporate support is a joke.
SUSE also really like their "I didn't expect the Spanish Inquisition!"-style random subscription audits too.
Why should SuSE be on the line for supporting nVidia, rather than nVidia itself or your hardware supplier? Or is SuSE now also selling corporate computer hardware?
Because its in scope for their support license that you're paying them for.
nVidia is neither Java nor a web server.
https://www.suse.com/support/policy-products/
I'm unsure what argument you are trying to make here? The page you linked makes no reference at all to nVidia. And directly below where it mentions Java (web servers are not mentioned at all, only web browsers), it also excludes:
And further down, it also excludes: I'm not sure if SuSE considers nVidia drivers to be 3rd party or not, but they are definitely without public available source and without an Open Source license.Because SuSE has YES-certified the hardware it's running on.
> related programming languages.
Does it matter what country a programming language originates from?
Yes, unless they are 100% under international standards, or 100% open source, they are subject to export restrictions from the overloads contributors, as per the countries their headquarters are located on.
Some examples,
https://www.java.com/en/download/help/error_embargoed.html
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/nuget/nuget-org/policies/e...