![]() ![]() And a lot of new plugins take advantage of that. This allows plugins to work on all aspects of the Digikam application and accompanying tools. The 15 year old KIPI plugin interface is swapped for the much improved DPlugins interface. Mixed HTTP/HTTPS content is now auto-upgraded to HTTPS, the Password Checkup utility checks if your saved passwords have been breached and the Predictive Phishing feature warns users if they are about to enter their passwords in a phishing website.ĭigikam 6.4 features a lot of changes in comparison to Digikam 6.0. A lot of security improvements were made, including DNS over HTTPS (experimental) where DNS (domain lookup) requests are send over a secured connection. Important new features include a Forced Dark Mode that enables dark mode on every website, the Silent Notification Popup feature contains notifications under a special icon in the URL address bar, the Tab Freezing feature unloads tabs that are not used for 5 minutes (saving CPU and RAM). Package nameĬhromium moved from version 73 to version 81 and a lot has changed. This comparison helps (future) openSUSE users understand the main differences between Leap 15.2 and Tumbleweed, so they can figure out which of these distributions is right for them. You install openSUSE Tumbleweed if you want to stay on the cutting edge. You install openSUSE Leap because you don’t want to deal with constant change. Staying a bit behind the curve is not necessarily a bad thing. This shows the areas where Leap 15.2 is behind the software development curve. I have only highlighted in green the packages that are significantly newer than the packages in Leap 15.2. The Tumbleweed column features a snapshot of the situation at the end of April 2020. OpenSUSE Tumbleweed is a rolling distribution, so it will always change. And in blue, I have highlighted the packages that are changed compared to Leap 15.1 at time of its release, but which are now also available in updated Leap 15.1 installations. In the Leap 15.2 column of the table below, I have highlighted in green the packages that are significantly changed in comparison to Leap 15.1. This includes a new version of the KDE desktop environment, a new version of the GNOME desktop environment and a new Linux kernel. ![]() OpenSUSE Leap 15.2 features many big updates. Both Leap and SLED share a lot of underlying packages, so this will be (again) a rock solid release. Leap 15.2 will coincide with SUSE Enterprise Linux Desktop 15 Service Pack 2. I have recently installed this on my laptop to check it out. ![]() OpenSUSE Leap 15.2 has entered the Beta phase on the 25th February 2020. ![]()
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