432: Three Tumbleweed Temptations

Can we live with openSUSE Tumbleweed? We try three different builds and prepare ourselves for our journey into SUSE land. Our setups, what we liked, and what we still need to figure out.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:2021 Tuxie Nominations are Open!SteamOS 3.0 will have an immutable filesystem - a first for arch? — During the Steam Deck Development live steam, Valve finally gave us some good news and said that SteamOS 3.0 will be generally available for everyone to install on their computers. They also revealed that SteamOS 3.0 will have an immutable root file system to prevent unauthorized access and use PipeWire for audio.Greg’s Company Buys Ads openSUSE Search Results — "Hey, @openSUSE have you been seeing a drop in downloads recently? I might know why..."They did this to AlmaLinux at the end of July.AlmaLinux AMASetting up a containerized environment - openSUSE User Documentation ProjectUsing the Linode Graphical Shell (Glish)How to switch from OpenSUSE Leap to Tumbleweed?Transactional Updates | Administration Guide | SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP1The Transactional Update GuideManpage for transactional-update — Transactional-update updates the system in a transactional way; this means updates are atomic, so either the patches are fully applied or nothing is changed. The update does not influence the running system and it can be rolled back. To activate the changes, the system needs to be rebooted. To achieve this transactional-update is using Btrfs' snapshot mechanism, combined with the default distribution toolsYaST Online UpdateOpenSUSE System UpdatesSnapper rollback with btrfsopenSUSE/transactional-update — Do transactional updates on openSUSE/SUSE Linux Enterprise products with btrfs, snapshots and rollback.Open Build ServiceOpenSUSE Conference 2017Post that explains some of the drawbacks of transaction updatesZypper cheat sheet VERY handy and recommend itJupiterGarage.comPick: mp4grep — Command-line tool that searches audio/video files.JB All Shows Feed

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