With immutable OS products like MicroOS and Aeon, openSUSE now offers a very different model of system management, one which emphasizes automation, hands-off management, and system self-care. It could be said that such products take the idea of "never touch a running system" and turn it into an operating model.
This session will explore some of consequences of such a model, and encourage the shifts in mindset needed for those more used to "traditional" Linux systems to reap the full benefits available from products like openSUSE Aeon and MicroOS
With immutable OS products like MicroOS and Aeon, openSUSE now offers a very different model of system management, one which emphasizes automation, hands-off management, and system self-care. It could be said that such products take the idea of "never touch a running system" and turn it into an operating model.
This session will explore some of consequences of such a model, and encourage the shifts in mindset needed for those more used to "traditional" Linux systems to reap the full benefits available from products like openSUSE Aeon and MicroOS