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Novell renames its free Linux OS

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Aug 10, 20061 min

Novell aims 'openSUSE' at Linux enthusiasts

To make it easier for customers to choose among its Linux operating system offerings, Novell said that it will call the free, open-source version of its software openSUSE to differentiate it from the company’s flagship SUSE Linux Enterprise product.

In an announcement Thursday, Waltham, Mass.-based Novell, which owns SUSE, said the openSUSE name was chosen to echo the name of the Novell-sponsored open-source Linux project, openSUSE.org.

The openSUSE operating system continues to be available for free download and is aimed at the general computing market and Linux enthusiasts, while the SUSE Linux Enterprise version is aimed at business users.

Technologies previewed in openSUSE may appear in future Novell enterprise Linux software when they’re refined and fully supported, according to the company. The current version of openSUSE is 10.1, with Version 10.2 scheduled to ship late this year.

“The new name openSUSE distinguishes our community distribution from our enterprise products, helping us maintain clear brands for our two main Linux constituencies,” John Dragoon, senior vice president and chief marketing officer at Novell, said in a statement.

Todd R. Weiss is an award-winning technology journalist and freelance writer who worked as a staff reporter for Computerworld from 2000 to 2008. Weiss covers enterprise IT from cloud computing to Hadoop to virtualization, enterprise applications such as ERP, CRM and BI, Linux and open source, and more. He spends his spare time working on a book about an unheralded member of the 1957 Milwaukee Braves and watching classic Humphrey Bogart movies.

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