![]() Since I frequently buy new notebooks/netbooks which have various kinds of new/different hardware, I often need the latest kernel and drivers to support them. I have already been using it on several systems for some time now, and I have been very pleased. On the other hand, for systems where I want the latest kernel and software packages, I will certainly continue to use openSuSE tumbleweed, which is a rolling release distribution. We'll just have to wait and see how things continue from there, but if it goes the way they have described in the openSuSE wiki and discussion groups, it should be just fine. It is not, as I had feared, going to be a significant step back. Well, the biggest thing is probably just knowing that the upcoming 'merged' SLE/openSuSE Leap 42.1 release is going to be a reasonable successor to the current openSuSE 13.2 release. ![]() So, what does all of this mean, and what did I get out of it? I didn't find anything else wrong, and the performance was pretty much what I expected. Select from the options below and copy the result over to your README or on your website, and enjoy it refresh automatically whenever the build result changes. That got the wi-fi adapter working, so I was then able to remove the two USB adapters, and continue with configuring/testing the installation. Embed a build result badge whereever you need it. I was then able to connect to my home network, and download the necessary b43 firmware. I grabbed that, plugged it in, and a few seconds later the network manager informed me that "wireless networks are available". Here's the inside story of the Pi, from its inspiration and development to plans for its future.īerryPi systems. The $35 Linux Raspberry Pi computer has sparked a coding revolution. ![]() 'We thought we'd sell 1,000': The inside story of the Raspberry Pi ![]()
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