Or rather, pay more attention to your typing Ronald, sed 's/peak/leap/'

You can read more about it at https://en.opensuse.org/Portal:Leap but no, I
don't know why exactly they chose the numbers they did for the versioning!

Pleasantly,
Ronald Bynoe

On Fri, Dec 18, 2015 at 11:29 AM, Ronald Bynoe <ron...@bynoe.us> wrote:

> Yeah, it's SuSE's new approach to developing their distribution. Peak is
> to SuSE Linux Enterprise as CentOS is to Red Hat Enterprise Linux. And
> Fedora is equivalent to OpenSuSE.
>
> So Peak and CentOS will be the more forward-looking versions of their
> enterprise counterparts. Peak has a slight difference in that it will also
> incorporate packages that are slated for future releases, kinda like a
> hybrid between Fedora and RHEL.
>
> On Fri, Dec 18, 2015 at 11:27 AM, benjamin barber <starwor...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> seminds me of sunos / solaris, version numbers are are social constructs
>> ;-)
>>
>> On Fri, Dec 18, 2015 at 11:20 AM, John Jason Jordan <joh...@comcast.net>
>> wrote:
>> > I am trying to figure out what is the latest release of OpenSuse.
>> > Apparently there was a 13.2, and maybe a 13.3, but now suddenly there
>> > is Leap, which is version 42.1. WTH?
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>
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