SuSE Linux 8.1 Professional
SuSE Linux 8.1 offers the best-looking Linux desktop OS around. It's also easy to use and well organized, and it performs adequately. Its installation process is so smooth and uncluttered, in fact, that this alone merits a chance from Windows die-hards. With two versions--the Professional package or the Personal version--SuSE 8.1 is far cheaper than Windows and is even more economical than LindowsOS. We'd like to see better support for the GNOME desktop environment, but SuSE makes Linux palatable for any experienced Windows user and surpasses Red Hat 8.0 in both installation and interface. If you're ready to switch to Linux, switch to SuSE.From the get-go, you'll discover that SuSE Linux 8.1 Professional is designed precisely for the would-be Windows convert. Its ultrasmooth installation routine from either CD or DVD--both of which are included in the retail package--offers to automatically resize an existing Windows partition to make room for Linux as a dual boot. It's so well-behaved, in fact, that it doesn't even attempt to hog all the available disk space. Instead, SuSE calculates a reasonable percentage of your hard disk, plus a bit more to ensure room for future upgrades and downloads, and it still manages to leave enough room for Windows to grow, as well. Note, however, that SuSE can resize only single-partition FAT32 Windows installations. If you have only NTFS drives, which is likely if you're using Windows 2000 or NT, you'll have to use SuSE's manual-partitioning utility, available from the setup routine.
On our test system, which contained multiple FAT32 and NTFS partitions, SuSE located the compatible free space, recommended a selection of Linux partitions, and started the installation procedure. From there, SuSE installed flawlessly. It stopped very few times for user input, mostly to ask how many components we wanted, and it booted without incident into a fully functioning graphical user interface (GUI). Red Hat didn't fare nearly as well.
Linux veterans know that the moment of truth with a Linux install is often the moment the X Window GUI starts up--that's when you'll detect any initial video card difficulties. SuSE had no trouble detecting cards on either of our test machines--a Compaq with a 1.1GHz Athlon and GeForce4 Ti 4200 card and an HP with a 500MHz Celeron and built-in video. In fact, it succeeded marvelously at detecting all of our hardware. The only glitch: the GeForce card wouldn't function in dual-display mode (that is, using two monitors), even with newly downloaded drivers from the Nvidia site, but we had the same problem with Red Hat.
Launch SuSE for the first time, and you'll arrive at its default desktop, KDE 3.0.3. Windows users will feel at home here, as SuSE sports a Start button, cascading menus for accessing programs, and desktop icons that open to reveal applications, hard drives, and system configuration options. With its rich colors and stylized icons, the KDE desktop is nothing short of gorgeous. SuSE also lets you switch to GNOME; WindowManager, another GUI option; and a few other less full-featured GUIs, either by switching and then logging back in or by going to them directly from the initial login screen. In addition, SuSE's configuration dialog is superb--well organized and informative, with a wealth of options. If you routinely play around with the configuration menus in Windows, you'll enjoy the even greater control that SuSE offers.
We wish Linux could finally rid itself of ugly screen fonts in word processing and Web browsing applications, but not even the superfriendly SuSE manages to do so. In fact, everybody's favorite Linux browser, Mozilla Netscape, is almost unreadable at times, its fonts look so spindly, thin, and jagged. Thankfully, the Linux development community has created a Web browser--Konqueror--that makes better use of font antialiasing and creates much crisper, more readable fonts. SuSE not only includes Konqueror, it defaults to the browser on start-up--an important decision if SuSE plans to attract Windows folks accustomed to nice, clear text.
SuSE 8.1 runs on the 2.4.19 Linux kernel and includes support for USB 2.0 and FireWire devices. Plus, SuSE ships with a seemingly endless supply of programs, ranging from sophisticated graphics and video tools to utilities and servers galore. It also includes the OpenOffice 1.0.1 office suite.
From a stability standpoint, SuSE is good but not great. In our casual tests, it crashed twice-- not unusual for any Linux distribution running on a PC with the latest hardware. The first, noncrucial crash occurred during a lengthy download from the SuSE Web site. The cause of the second, however, is related to SuSE's only significant problem: its GNOME support. Specifically, GNOME's feature-rich e-mail program, Ximian Evolution, crashed several times and once took the operating system down with it. We didn't have any similar problems with Red Hat 8.0, running precisely the same version of Evolution, so the conclusion is that SuSE doesn't play well with the GNOME environment. That's not too serious, since you can switch back to the KDE desktop, but you will miss out on Ximian and other powerful GNOME-only applications.



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