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The new enterprise release of SUSE Linux is designed as a modular system so that it can be used by companies and organisations of all sizes, the company behind it says.
Germany-based SUSE Linux announced the release of SUSE Linux Enterprise 15, SUSE Manager 3.2 and SUSE Linux Enterprise High Performance Computing 15 last week.
A statement from the company said the SLE 15 used a common codebase to ensure applications could be moved across multimodal IT environments. It is also claimed to help businesses make the transition from the use of the community distribution, openSUSE, to the enterprise version that was fully supported by the company.
The new version of SUSE Manager has new features that focus on lower costs, improving DevOps efficiency, and managing large, complex deployments across IoT, cloud and container infrastructures.
“As organisations around the world transform their enterprise systems to embrace modern and agile technologies, multiple infrastructures for different workloads and applications are needed,” said SUSE chief technology officer Thomas Di Giacomo.
“This often means integrating cloud-based platforms into enterprise systems, merging containerised development with traditional development, or combining legacy applications with microservices. To bridge traditional and software-defined infrastructure, SUSE has built a multimodal operating system – SUSE Linux Enterprise 15.”


Sam Varghese has been writing for iTWire since 2006, a year after the site came into existence. For nearly a decade thereafter, he wrote mostly about free and open source software, based on his own use of this genre of software. Since May 2016, he has been writing across many areas of technology. He has been a journalist for nearly 40 years in India (Indian Express and Deccan Herald), the UAE (Khaleej Times) and Australia (Daily Commercial News (now defunct) and The Age). His personal blog is titledIrregular Expression.
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