OpenSUSE has a partition tool included with its YaST configuration suite called aptly, Partitioner. Besides doing what you'd expect such a tool to do such as create, delete, edit and mount partitions, it also has another cool feature that I just discovered.
It's listed under Device Graphs after you open Partitioner and it shows your partitions in a tree format. Great for when your layout isn't that simple. And did I mention it's just cool? Here it is in action on my system.
Cool! :-)
This doesn't really belong here, but since we're writing about Suse....
One other amazing feature they have is the 'picture of the day' selection in wallpaper choices. Booted into Suse to have a look at the partition graphics in mine, and booted into another spectacular picture. Have seen some great ones over the year.
Nice find, Harry! I didn't know about that.
Me neither. Can they be directly downloaded for use in another distro?
I believe I've only seen it in Mageia and Suse. Probably saves a bit of trouble for creating and gathering appropriate wallpaper. But the pictures are often spectacular. I think, but not sure, the pictures come from National Geographic.
You can choose the source of the pictures. Probably important to mention that this is in Plasma, not sure if it's in the Gnome edition of OpenSUSE. Tried to screen capture the drop-down menu under Providers but for some reason it doesn't show.
If it's also in Mageia, I'm thinking it's actually a Plasma feature and not specifically an openSUSE feature.
Does that mean you can or can't download the pictures for use on another distro that doesn't have Plasma?
Quote from: fox on July 24, 2019, 07:14:33 AM
Does that mean you can or can't download the pictures for use on another distro that doesn't have Plasma?
Did you try searching National Geographic to find the photo or picture of the day? AFAIK, these are external sources. They're not a collection of wallpapers stored in the distro. Hope that answers your question.
It's a Plasma feature for sure. Checked Kubuntu. Just as Jason described for Suse.
No big deal Mike. Just use Plasma. :)