Yeah, they consume all the upvotes. :3
muhyb
No problem.
Hmm, if there was a soft-block or a hard-block that would affect all the other distros as well. In that case, trying from a Live ISO would indeed help. Maybe this could be something related to Network Manager. Can you check interfaces with ip a
?
Also check if Network Manager running with systemctl status NetworkManager
. If it doesn't work, start it with sudo systemctl start NetworkManager
, then chekc your connection again.
Does network work on those distros but not on openSUSE, or network doesn't work at all?
Maybe it's a switch issue? Can you try sudo rfkill
and see what's the output?
Solved the issue but thank you for the reply. It looks like a nice GUI option.
Found my answer faster than I thought. Thanks though, this might be useful for people who use Hyprland.
To be fair, that sounds like a driver issue rather than a desktop environment. But you can try though.
Not sure when the last time you used openSUSE but the reason why I think it's noob-friendly is you don't need a terminal to update the system (talking about the KDE version here). When there is an update a notification pops up, you go to system tray, click on the icon and do the updates. You can even see a list what's been updating. It doesn't even ask a password, probably thanks to polkit.
They're fine for a stable release I think. Nvidia is on 550 for example. For Major updates, ping me next year since I'll try it then, when new Leap arrived.
My first experiment with openSUSE was also not ended well back then but nowadays it's in my top 3 list when I'm suggesting distros to people.
Leap is surely noob-friendly.
It would be terrible if done by some government though.
Where is she? I can't see her!