November 06, 2006
Turning SLED10 Linux Into a Practical User DesktopBy A. Lizard
Nine Steps to Running Video (and DVD Playback) with SLED10
In the course of installation, I found w32codecs as a dependency and installed it, which saved me the trouble of looking for it. The license issue has to do with w32codecs, which contain proprietary codecs and are unavailable in the U.S. As soon as it installed, I opened xine. It handled everything I threw at it, including avi, mov, mpg and wmv files. Repository Configuration Problem I tried adding the iu-bremen repository to make multimedia available, through Software Installer " configuration >add repository. But the prompt shown below informed me that security preferences for which programs the automated installer will install had to be changed to checksum or none for security. Try checksum; this verifies that the checksum cryptographically derived from the program matches the separate checksum listed in the file. The following image shows the problem I had when I first tried following the steps described above from the desktop without using a terminal:
The repository setup UI is not especially well configured. The top circle-bar error message told me that to use that OpenSUSE repository, I had to change the security level preference. The bottom error message said that my attempt to access it failed. What should have happened is this: A root password prompt should have come up to ensure I had authority to make that change; then I should have gone to a screen giving me a checkbox or pulldown menu choice of the available security levels: none, checksum, or digital signature. To set up a new repository in a GUI installer, you should not have to open a root terminal. Instead, after I found those prompts, I had to drag and drop Software installer onto the Desktop. Then I had to open Properties to find out the zen-installer program name, open a root terminal, open zen-installer from the root prompt, add the repository from within the GUI configuration, type in "checksum" for security preference into the text box, exit the program, close the terminal, and then reopen Software installer from the Main Menu. Whew! Totem wouldn't play wmv files, but since xine works. I can't see any reason to try to fix this. What happened when I tried wmv is shown in this next screenshot:
For more detail, go to this SuSE Forum. But use the repository mentioned above, not the one the posters recommend. Windows Emulation Why run Windows on top of Linux? Here are four good reasons:
VMware: It works! Win4Lin: Novell says it works with Win4Lin Pro. Since I don't recommend Win4Lin Pro, it's untested here. If you need Windows emulation and your CPU has hardware support for hardware virtualization (Intel, AMD, Pacifica) look at Xen emulation, or at VMware for earlier CPUs. Xen: Not tested. Until my next upgrade, I won't have a CPU installed with hardware virtualization support. SLED10 is reported to run XP just fine in emulation. See screenshots and how-to link here. But getting it to work looks painful. CONCLUSIONS Once you get past the "enterprise-ready" and "Vista-killer" hype, SLED10 really isn't a bad distro. However, I found little a system builder could use to add $50 worth of value to a client's system. Even the slower upgrade cycle of an "enterprise" distribution might work against the home, SOHO or SMB user in this case. A faster upgrade could mean your problems will get fixed faster. The underlying SuSE free Open Source distro might be worth a look. So what would SLED10 need to make it worth $50 to a systems builder? Here are my top suggestions:
Looking ahead, I expect SLED11 to provide more of the functionality needed in a Desktop-oriented Linux distribution. Here's hoping!
A. LIZARD is an Internet consultant in the San Francisco Bay Area. He has been writing for technology magazines and Web sites since 1987.
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