Roadmap: Next openSUSE in November

Mar 09, 2009

The openSUSE team is abandoning its usual half-year release cycle and is planning its next versions for every eight months instead.

The openSUSE 11.2 release actually should have been ready soon, but the developers decided to postpone it to a later date, supposedly September 2009. Now project manager Stephan Kulow ("coolo") has released the roadmap in the project mailing list and openSUSE 11.2 is not expected until November. The subsequent versions should follow: November 2009, "Fichte" (11.2); July 2010, "Rousseau" (11.3); March 2011, "Voltaire" (12.0); November 2011, "Lessing" (12.1). The intervals end up being between seven and eight months.

As Kulow says, "This gives us a single release in 2009 and 2010, and two release in 2011. The version names and numbers may change, of course."

Coolo bases the decision on the relatively late release dates, among other things, on avoiding holiday blackouts in the summer months that openSUSE can pick up the spring release of GNOME 2.28, allowing ample time for development. How the recent lay-offs from Novell's openSUSE project affects the timetable wasn't brought up.

The openSUSE 11.2 release should include software components such as KDE 4.3, GNOME 2.28, Kernel 2.6.30 (or later), ext4 as the standard filesystem, a web interface for YaST and netbook support with completely new drivers. The roadmap is not set in stone, but feedback to Coolo's announcement has been generally positive.

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Comments

  • New Next openSUSE

    I am so looking forward to the next openSUSE version it's not even funny. Now that Linux is getting to the point of delivering multimedia drivers and other advanced hardware drivers - it's starting to feel like a Microsoft environment where things don't work at all or only half work and a person has to wait a year for a complete fix. I think with the version 11.3 with ext4 and a perfected KDE GUI will finally show the world what Linux is all about...in comparison to Microsoft. In the same breath I will have to add - be prepared for having to buy new and more powerful PC's though. With the new Linux kernel at 2.6.28 - a lot of peripherals will be running and everyone knows they take a lot of resources which means probably a minimum of 3.0 gigahertz CPU's having to be used for accepted behaviours of the programs. Everything has its cost and Microsoft found with Vista that overloading the PC's makes for a nasty audience of users.
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