Leftovers: openSUSE, Kubernetes, and More
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openSUSE Tumbleweed – Review of the week 2022/46
Dear Tumbleweed users and hackers,
For Tumbleweed it has become the norm to deliver snapshots daily – and we are not making any exception to this in week 46. We have again published 7 snapshots (1111…1117), with the latest one just published moments ago. From a staging point of view, it seems like things are being tested much better lately before being submitted: almost everything passes through staging in a day or so (this is not an invitation to change this – more a Thank you to the respective maintainers making things the way they are)
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Kubernetes Removals, Deprecations, and Major Changes in 1.26 | Kubernetes
Change is an integral part of the Kubernetes life-cycle: as Kubernetes grows and matures, features may be deprecated, removed, or replaced with improvements for the health of the project. For Kubernetes v1.26 there are several planned: this article identifies and describes some of them, based on the information available at this mid-cycle point in the v1.26 release process, which is still ongoing and can introduce additional changes.
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SCSI mpt3sas kernel module added
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Framework Laptop 2 Review: An Upgradable Laptop | WIRED
Once the laptop was assembled and configured to my liking, it was time to install an OS. Framework supports Windows 11 and a few different Linux distributions. (While I was testing, Framework released a Chromebook as well. ChromeOS can technically run on a regular Framework laptop, but this requires adding some different hardware.) Having used nothing but Linux for over 15 years now, I obviously installed Linux. I started with what I think is the best Linux option for newcomers, System76’s Pop_OS, which I covered in more detail in my review of the HP Dev One. I also tested Ubuntu, which Framework supports, and Arch Linux, which Framework does not officially support but worked just fine (Framework does support Manjaro, which is based on Arch).