On 09/02/16 10:00, Dieter Thalmayr wrote:
Hey, why not?

Sounds tempting.
I'm kind of disappointed that ubuntu runs on all this stuff, and my SUSE seems always to lag behind.

So let's take it as a kind of sporty initiative.
And expect stupid questions
;)

Helau

Dieter

On Tue, 9 Feb 2016 10:20:57 +0100, Dirk Müller wrote:
Hi Dieter,

Copying the SUSE image into that and booting it, also fabulously worked.
Even updating that 13.1 image to the latest state was possible.

We have exynos 4 support disabled in the tumbleweed kernel, thats why.
if you have patience to retest an image, I can branch a kernel with
exynos4 enabled intot he contrib and we'll continue from there.

Greetings,
Dirk

openSUSE never took ARM to be a serious platform until the Raspberry Pi arrived on the scene.

I had asked a long way back and was told that Intel Atom would obsolete ARM - I quoted that email back to the author on this list when openSUSE woke up to the fact that ARM wasn't going away any decade soon.

The first implementation on ODROID-X eventually crashed irretrievably and there was nowhere else to go but to Ubuntu.

I am definitely not fond of Ubuntu, I run openSUSE on 4 x86_64 boxes - my preferred choice, Kubuntu on a couple more to help Ubuntu users and Ubuntu ARM on ODROID-X/-U3/-C1, Parallella-16, Raspbian on Raspberry Pi 2 and it looks like having to go to Ubuntu again for PINE A64+ and ODROID-C2.
Regards
Sid.

--
Sid Boyce ... Hamradio License G3VBV, Licensed Private Pilot
Emeritus IBM/Amdahl Mainframes and Sun/Fujitsu Servers Tech Support
Senior Staff Specialist, Cricket Coach
Microsoft Windows Free Zone - Linux used for all Computing Tasks

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