ROSA Linux

ROSA Linux

Rosa Marathon 2012 LTS
OS family Unix-like
Working state Current
Source model Open source
Initial release 1 December 2010 (2010-12-01)
Latest release Desktop Fresh R8 / 3 August 2016 (2016-08-03)[1]
Available in Multilingual
Package manager RPM
Platforms x86, x86-64
Kernel type Monolithic (Linux)
Userland GNU
Default user interface KDE4, KDE Plasma 5, MATE and GNOME
License Mainly GPL and other free software licenses, minor additions of proprietary
Official website rosalinux.com

ROSA Linux is a Linux operating system and distribution, developed by Russian company LLC NTC IT ROSA. It is available in three different editions: ROSA Desktop Fresh, ROSA Enterprise Desktop and ROSA Enterprise Linux Server, with the latter two aiming at commercial users. Its desktop editions come bundled with closed-source software such as Adobe Flash Player, multimedia codecs and Steam.

ROSA Desktop Fresh R8, the newest desktop release, is available with four different desktop environments: KDE4, KDE Plasma 5, MATE and GNOME.[2][3] It also contains open source software developed in-house by ROSA, such as ROSA Image Writer or ROSA Media Player.[4] ROSA Linux has been certied by the Russian Ministry of Defence.

ROSA originated as a fork of now defunct French Linux distribution Mandriva and has since then been developed independently. The ROSA company was founded in early 2010 and released the first version of its operating system in December 2010. It initially only targeted enterprise users, but in late 2012, ROSA started its end-user oriented distribution, Desktop Fresh. Several distributions aimed at former Mandriva users, such as OpenMandriva Lx or MagOS Linux, are now themselves based on ROSA. Before its bankruptcy, Mandriva developed its last releases jointly with ROSA.[5] Mandriva 2011 was also based on ROSA. ROSA Enterprise Linux Server is based on Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

Although its main popularity is in the Russian-speaking market, ROSA Desktop also received favorable reviews by several non-Russian online publications. German technology website Golem.de praised ROSA for its stability and hardware support,[6] while LinuxInsider.com called ROSA "a real Powerhouse".[7]

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.