Showing posts with label mandriva. Show all posts
Showing posts with label mandriva. Show all posts
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
Mozilla Thunderbird 38.0.1 is out, Install on Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Pinguy OS, Elementary OS, Deepin, Peppermint, LXLE, Linux Lite, Debian, Robolinux, SparkyLinux, Fedora, CentOS, OpenSUSE, Mageia, OpenMandriva, Arch Linux, Manjaro, ROSA Desktop etc
Install / Update Mozilla Thunderbird 38.0.1 on Ubuntu 15.04 vivid Vervet, ubuntu 14.10 Utopic Unicorn, Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr (LTS), Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca, Linux Mint 17 Qiana, Pinguy OS, Elementary OS, Deepin, Peppermint, LXLE, Linux Lite, Debian 8 "jessie", Debian 7 "wheezy", Debian 6 "squeeze", Robolinux, SparkyLinux, Fedora 22, Fedora21, Fedora 20, CentOS 7, CentOS 6, OpenSUSE 13.2, OpenSUSE 13.1, Mageia 5, OpenMandriva, Arch Linux, Manjaro, ROSA Desktop etc
Thunderbird is a free email application that's easy to set up and customize - and it's loaded with great features!
Sending and receiving emails is like breathing these days, and you will need a reliable and extremely stable application to do it right. Mozilla Thunderbird is one of those rare applications that provides users with a feature-rich, easy to use and extendable email client. Besides begin an email client, the software is also a very good RSS news reader, as well as a newsgroup and chat client. It is supported and installed by default in many Linux operating systems.
Features at a glance
Among some of its major highlights, we can mention adaptive junk mail controls, saved search folders, global inbox support, message grouping, privacy protection, and comprehensive mail migration from other email clients.
Mozilla Thunderbird is designed to be very comprehensive. It will help users communicate better in an office space, allowing them to send, received emails, chat with their colleagues, and stay updated with the latest news.
Few know that the application provides users with a built-in web browser functionality, using a tabbed user interface and based on its bigger brother, the powerful Mozilla Firefox web explorer. Another interesting feature is the ability to add extensions, popularly known as add-ons, which will extended the default functionality of the application.
What New in Mozilla Thunderbird 38.0.1 :
- GMail supports OAuth2 authentication, removing the need to manually select "allow less secure applications" in Google options for the account.
- Ship Lightning calendar addon with Thunderbird and enable with an opt-out dialog
- Filter sent messages
- Filter messages when archived
- Enable search in multiple/all address books
- Add support for Yahoo Messenger in Chat
- Support Internationalized domain name URLs for RSS feeds
- Show expanded columns in folder pane
- Allow file-per-message (maildir) local message storage
- Add a Learn more link to the support page in feeds subscribe dialog
- Add reading position marker line to conversations
- The editor for twitter should show inputtable character count
Installation instructions:
Mozilla does not provide a repository for Thunderbird, but the installation steps are quite easy anyway and should not create difficulties on any Linux distribution.
The latest versions of Firefox are available as pre-compiled libraries via the Mozilla FTP, so we need to download the archive (i386 or i686 for 32 bit systems and amd64 or x86_64 for 64 bit systems), extract it and run the thunderbird file. Also, it is advised to remove previous versions of Thunderbird, move Thunderbird to /opt and create a symlink, for an easier usage.
The below instructions should work on all the popular Linux systems, including Ubuntu 15.04 vivid Vervet, ubuntu 14.10 Utopic Unicorn, Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr (LTS), Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca, Linux Mint 17 Qiana, Pinguy OS, Elementary OS, Deepin, Peppermint, LXLE, Linux Lite, Debian 8 "jessie", Debian 7 "wheezy", Debian 6 "squeeze", Robolinux, SparkyLinux, Fedora 22, Fedora21, Fedora 20, CentOS 7, CentOS 6, OpenSUSE 13.2, OpenSUSE 13.1, Mageia 5, OpenMandriva, Arch Linux, Manjaro, ROSA Desktop etc
How to install Thunderbird on 32 bit Linux systems:
$ wget ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/thunderbird/releases/38.0.1/linux-i686/en-US/thunderbird-38.0.1.tar.bz2
$ tar -xjvf thunderbird-38.0.1.tar.bz2
$ sudo rm -rf /opt/thunderbird*
$ sudo mv thunderbird /opt/thunderbird
$ sudo ln -sf /opt/thunderbird/thunderbird /usr/bin/thunderbird
To start Thunderbird, just open a terminal, type thunderbird and hit enter.
How to install Thunderbird on 64 bit Linux systems:
How to install Thunderbird on 64 bit Linux systems:
$ wget ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/thunderbird/releases/38.0.1/linux-x86_64/en-US/thunderbird-38.0.1.tar.bz2
$ tar -xjvf thunderbird-38.0.1.tar.bz2
$ sudo rm -rf /opt/thunderbird*
$ sudo mv thunderbird /opt/thunderbird
$ sudo ln -sf /opt/thunderbird/thunderbird /usr/bin/thunderbird
To start Thunderbird, just open a terminal, type thunderbird and hit enter.
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Nvidia Linux Display Driver 352.21 is released, Install on Linux Mint, Ubuntu, Fedora, OpenSuse, Debian, RHEL, Slackware and Arch Linux
Install Nvidia Linux Display Driver 352.21 on Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca, Linux Mint 17 Qiana, Ubuntu 15.04 vivid Vervet, ubuntu 14.10 Utopic Unicorn, Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr (LTS), Fedora 21, Fedora 20, Fedora 19, Fedora 18, OpenSuse 13.2, openSUSE 13.1, openSUSE 12.3, Debian 8 "jessie" (upcoming), Debian 7 "wheezy", Debian 6 "squeeze", RHEL, Slackware, CentOS 6, CentOS 7 and Arch Linux
Nvidia Linux Display Driver is a proprietary OpenGL video driver that tries to bring support for the graphics cards produced by Nvidia on Linux-based operating systems. This version supports only the 32-bit architecture. For 64-bit support, see this link. Even if it provides a settings panel, the Nvidia Linux Display Driver is not an application. It is a hardware driver, which provides some instructions that tell an operating system how to use a piece of hardware
Release highlights since 352.09:
- Added support for the following GPUs:
- Tesla K40t
- GeForce 720A
- GeForce 920A
- GeForce 930A
- GeForce 940A
- GeForce GTX 950A
- GeForce GTX 980 Ti
- Tesla K40t
- Added GLX Protocol support for the following OpenGL extensions:
- GL_ARB_copy_buffer
- GL_ARB_texture_buffer_object
- GL_ARB_copy_buffer
- Fixed a bug that caused the Display Configuration page of the nvidia-settings control panel to automatically generate layouts with multiple displays occupying the same position when enabling or disabling Base Mosaic.
- Updated nvidia-settings to allow the use of the standard Display Configuration page when SLI Mosaic is enabled.
- Fixed a bug that caused the kernel to report errors when unmapping DMA allocations on kernels with CONFIG_DEBUG_DMA_API enabled.
- Fixed a bug that caused a kernel crash if SLI Mosaic and G-SYNC were used at the same time on a configuration with more display devices connected to one GPU than another.
- Fixed a bug in nvidia-settings that caused the application to crash when saving the EDID to a file.
- Fixed a bug that prevented the "mkprecompiled" utility included in the driver package from reading files correctly.
- Fixed a bug that could cause an Xid error when terminating a video playback application using the overlay presentation queue in VDPAU.
- Updated nvidia-installer to avoid recursing too deeply into kernel source trees under /usr/lib/modules, mirroring an existing restriction on recursion under /lib/modules.
In our tests, we’ve discovered that the Nvidia Linux Display Driver supports much more Nvidia graphics cards than the open source Nouveau driver. It plays well with most of the ION, ION LE, Quadro Plex, Quadro Sync, GRID, NVS, nForce Professional 3000, Quadro FX, Quadro Blade, as well as all the GeForce series.
All in all, if you have a PC or laptop equipped with an Nvidia GPU, and you have issues with the default Nouveau open source driver, you may want to install the Nvidia Linux Display Driver. It’s also the number one choice for gaming users.
Install Nvidia Linux Display Driver 352.21 on Linux Mint, Ubuntu, Fedora, OpenSuse, Debian, RHEL, Slackware and Arch Linux
How To Install Nvidia Linux Display Driver 352.21 on Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca, Linux Mint 17 Qiana, Ubuntu 15.04 vivid Vervet, ubuntu 14.10 Utopic Unicorn, Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr (LTS), Fedora 21, Fedora 20, Fedora 19, Fedora 18, OpenSuse 13.2, openSUSE 13.1, openSUSE 12.3, Debian 8 "jessie" (upcoming), Debian 7 "wheezy", Debian 6 "squeeze", RHEL, Slackware, CentOS 6, CentOS 7, Arch Linux, Ubuntu 15.04 vivid Vervet, ubuntu 14.10 Utopic Unicorn, Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr (LTS), Ubuntu 13.10/13.04/12.04, Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca, Linux Mint 17 Qiana, Linux Mint 13 Maya, Pinguy OS 14.04, Elementary OS 0.3 Freya, Elementary OS 0.2 Luna, Peppermint Five, Deepin 2014, LXLE 14.04, Linux Lite 2.0, Linux Lite 2.2 and other Ubuntu derivative systems from Single file installation :For Linux 32 bit :
# wget http://us.download.nvidia.com/XFree86/Linux-x86/352.21/NVIDIA-Linux-x86-352.21.run
# chmod +x NVIDIA-Linux-x86-352.21.run
# ./NVIDIA-Linux-x86-352.21.run
For Linux 64 bit :
# wget http://us.download.nvidia.com/XFree86/Linux-x86_64/352.21/NVIDIA-Linux-x86_64-352.21.run
# chmod+x NVIDIA-Linux-x86_64-352.21.run
# ./NVIDIA-Linux-x86_64-352.21.run
For Linux System 32 bit ARM, do :
# wget http://us.download.nvidia.com/XFree86/Linux-x86-ARM/352.21/NVIDIA-Linux-armv7l-gnueabihf-352.21.run
# chmod +x NVIDIA-Linux-armv7l-gnueabihf-352.21.run
# ./NVIDIA-Linux-armv7l-gnueabihf-352.21.run
Releases Announce
flareGet 4.1-80 Stable Released, Available for Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Debian, Fedora, Mandriva, OpenSuse, Arch Linux, Chakra Linux and many more...
flareGet 4.1-80 Stable Released, Available for Ubuntu 15.04 vivid Vervet, ubuntu 14.10 Utopic Unicorn, Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr (LTS), Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca, Linux Mint 17 Qiana, Linux Mint 13 Maya, Debian 8 "jessie", Debian 7 "wheezy", Fedora 22, Fedora 21, Fedora 20, Mandriva, OpenSuse, Arch Linux, Chakra Linux and many more...
flareGet is a freeware product that provides users with a complex, full featured, multi-threaded, multi-segment and cross-platform download manager and accelerator that can easily replace the default download manager of popular web browsers, such as Mozilla Firefox, Google Chrome, Opera or Internet Explorer.
It supports Windows XP/Vista/7/8 , Mac OS X 10.7+ and almost all 32 and 64 bit Debian, RPM and Pacman based Linux Distributions. The supported Linux Distributions include Ubuntu, Fedora, Mandriva, OpenSuse, LinuxMint, Arch Linux, Chakra Linux and many more...
Features at a glance
Key features include enhanced browser integration through add-ons, dynamic file segmentation algorithm for amazingly fast downloads, batch download, support for pausing and resuming unfinished downloads, on completion actions, YouTube video grabber, scheduler, proxy support, as well as intelligent file management.
What's new in flareGet 4.1-80:
- fixed failure of downloads with file size than 5KB
- fixed the download dialog behaviour to display on top
- fixed hiding of main window on closing to tray in Mac
- fixed some minor UI issues
- added notification for download start, if download dialog is disabled
- improvements in queue manager
- added support for showing files selected on opening in file manager
- other minor bug fixes and improvements
open a new Terminal window and bash (get it?) in the following commands:
For Linux system 32 bit :
$ wget -c http://flareget.com/files/flareget/debs/i386/flareget_4.1-80_i386.deb
$ sudo dpkg -i flareget_4.1-80_i386.deb
For Linux system 64 bit :
$ wget -c hhttp://www.flareget.com/files/flareget/debs/amd64/flareget_4.1-80_amd64.debIn case “dpkg” indicates missing dependencies, complete the installation by executing the following command:
$ sudo dpkg -i flareget_4.1-80_amd64.deb
$ sudo apt-get install -f
Download and Install on Fedora 22, Fedora 21, Fedora 20 and OpenSUSE 13.2, OpenSUSE 13.1 :
open a new Terminal window and bash (get it?) in the following commands:
For 32 bit :
$ wget -c http://www.flareget.com/files/flareget/rpm/i386/flareget_4.1-80_i386(stable)_rpm.tar.gzFor 64 bit :
$ wget -c http://www.flareget.com/files/flareget/rpm/amd64/flareget_4.1-80_x86_64(stable)_rpm.tar.gz
For Mac OSX 64 bit : Download i here
For Arch Linux, Chakra Linux and other Pacman based Linux distributions.
Download 32 bit | Download 64 bit
FlareGet for Linux System Requirements:
FlareGet is a native Linux application written in C++, using Qt framework. FlareGet will run on almost all desktop environments - GNOME, KDE, Unity, Cinnamon etc. To run FlareGet following minimum dependencies should be met:
- Qt libraries with version >=4.8.1
- glibc (C library) with version >=2.13
FlareGet Issues:
FTP support is limited. Only single threaded download is supported, with no resume and proxy support.
FTP support is limited. Only single threaded download is supported, with no resume and proxy support.
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Calibre 2.31.0 released, Install on Arch Linux, Manjaro, Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Fedora, CentOS, OpenSUSE, Mageia
Calibre 2.31.0 is released, you can Install on Arch Linux, Manjaro, Ubuntu 15.04 vivid Vervet, ubuntu 14.10 Utopic Unicorn, Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr (LTS), Linux Mint 17.2 Rafaela, Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca, Linux Mint 17 Qiana, Fedora 22, Fedora 21, CentOS 6, CentOS 5, OpenSUSE 13.1, OpenSUSE 13.2, Mageia
Calibre is an open source e-book library management application designed for the 21th century, for the digital world that were are living in right now. It lets users to manipulate digital books in any way possible. It helps users to easily read ebooks on their personal computer, convert ebooks from one format to another, create electronic books based on recipes of your very own ideas.
Features at a glance
The software can download news from a sleuth of various sources, and comes with a content server for online access. Syncing ebooks to a supported mobile reader device is also possible with Calibre. E-book library management is the the main component of the application, displayed every time you open the application. From here, you can convert and organize e-books in a simple manner. It imports and exports many ebook formats, including ePub, MOBI, AZW, DOC, XML, etc. Just like any other software that can be extended via plugins, Calibre features an internal collection of add-ons, which provide support for editing metadata of ebooks, or add support for various ebook readers.
New features:
- E-book viewer: Make the search engine used for searching for selected text configurable (in the Miscellaneous section of the viewer preferences)
- E-book viewer: Fix dragging to select text with the mouse causing the page to slide sideways in paged mode, if the mouse leaves the text area.
- E-book viewer: Fix transitioning between full screen mode and normal mode sometimes causing current position to not be preserved.
- AZW3 Input: Ignore incorrect text encoding (incorrectly encoded bytes are now replaced by placeholders) instead of erroring out.
- Get Books: Update Legimi and CDP store plugins for website changes
- Fix Cybook Nolimbook not being detected in linux and OS X.
- DOCX Output: Fix internal hyperlinks being ignored when they point to a HTML file whoseelement has an id.
- Edit Book: Fix groups in replace template being interpreted backwards when search direction is up
- Searching: When search as you type is active, do not change automatically change focus to the book list when searching, unless the user presses Enter.
- Font subsetting: Fix subsetting removing some needed ligatures when subsetting some Arabic fonts
- Prevent errors when testing email sending even if stderr on the host machine is broken
Install Calibre 2.31.0 on Arch Linux, Manjaro, Ubuntu 15.04 vivid Vervet, ubuntu 14.10 Utopic Unicorn, Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr (LTS), Linux Mint 17.2 Rafaela, Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca, Linux Mint 17 Qiana, Fedora 22, Fedora 21, CentOS 6, CentOS 5, OpenSUSE 13.1, OpenSUSE 13.2, Mageia ;
For Arch Linux, Manjaro, ArchBang, Antergos and other Arch Linux derivative systems, Calibre is available via AUR, so, in order to install it, do:
$ sudo pacman -Sy yaourt
$ sudo yaourt calibre
For other Linux systems, including Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Pinguy OS, Elementary OS, Deepin, Peppermint, LXLE, Linux Lite, Debian, Robolinux, SparkyLinux, Fedora, CentOS, OpenSUSE, Mageia or OpenMandriva (and others), the developers have created an installation script that can be triggered via the below oneliner:
$ sudo -v && wget -nv -O- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kovidgoyal/calibre/master/setup/linux-installer.py | sudo python -c “import sys; main=lambda:sys.stderr.write(‘Download failed\n’); exec(sys.stdin.read()); main()”
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Install Telegram Desktop 0.8.24 on Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Pinguy OS, Elementary OS, Deepin, Peppermint, LXLE, Linux Lite, Debian, Robolinux, SparkyLinux, Fedora, CentOS, OpenSUSE, Mageia, OpenMandriva, Arch Linux, Manjaro, ROSA
Install Telegram Desktop 0.8.24 on Ubuntu 15.04 vivid Vervet, ubuntu 14.10 Utopic Unicorn, Ubuntu 14.04 Trusty Tahr (LTS), Linux Mint 17.1 Rebecca, Linux Mint 17 Qiana, Pinguy OS, Elementary OS, Deepin, Peppermint, LXLE, Linux Lite, Debian, Robolinux, SparkyLinux, Fedora 22, Fedora 21, Fedora 20, CentOS 6, CentOS 5, OpenSUSE 13.2, OpenSUSE 13.1, Mageia 5, OpenMandriva, Arch Linux, Manjaro, ROSA
Telegram Desktop is an open source, multiplatform, modern and free graphical application that allows any Linux user to easily and quickly talk with friends, co-workers and family members who use the Telegram messenger, from the comfort of their GNU/Linux desktops.
Telegram is a revolutionary messaging system that can be easily described as fast, highly secure, cloud-based, distributed, free, open source, encrypted, powerful, and cross-platform, available on all the important mobile devices (Android, iOS (iPhone/iPad), Windows Phone) and operating systems (Linux, Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows).
With Telegram you will be able to connect from remote locations, synchronize your conversations on all of your devices, create groups of up to 200 members, send documents of any type, send encrypted information that cannot be intercepted by government agencies, store media files in the cloud, as well as to choose to destruct certain messages.
What New in Telegram Desktop 0.8.24 ;
- Improved sticker panel
- New autoupdate check
- OpenAL updated to a new version
- Autoupdating improved
- Bugfixes
- Added sending voice messages
- Fixed disappearing stickers
- Translations improved
- Fixed disappearing stickers
- Voice messages recording and sending
Installation instructions:
The latest versions of Telegram are available as pre-compiled libraries via the project’s website, so we need to download the archive (i386 or i686 for 32 bit systems and amd64 or x86_64 for 64 bit systems), extract it, cd into the needed folder and run the telegram file. Also, it is advised to remove previous versions of telegram, move telegram to /opt and create a symlink, for an easier usage.
The below instructions should work on all the popular Linux systems, including Ubuntu, Linux Mint, Pinguy OS, Elementary OS, Deepin, Peppermint, LXLE, Linux Lite, Debian, Robolinux, SparkyLinux, Fedora, CentOS, OpenSUSE, Mageia, OpenMandriva, Arch Linux, Manjaro, ROSA Desktop etc.
How to install Telegram Desktop on 32 bit Linux s ystems:
$ wget https://tdesktop.com/linux32To start Telegram Destkop, open the terminal, type telegram and hit enter.
$ tar -xJvf tsetup32.0.8.24.tar.xz
$ sudo mv Telegram /opt/telegram
$ sudo ln -sf /opt/telegram /usr/bin/telegram
How to install Telegram Desktop on 64 bit Linux s ystems:
$ wget https://tdesktop.com/linuxTo start Telegram Destkop, open the terminal, type telegram and hit enter.
$ tar -xJvf tsetup32.0.8.24.tar.xz
$ sudo mv Telegram /opt/telegram
$ sudo ln -sf /opt/telegram /usr/bin/telegram
After you have installed Telegram Desktop, start the app, type in your mobile phone number, write the confirmation code you have received on your phone and you’re done.
The source for Mac OS X is available now. Binary packages are in the process of being built, and will appear soon at their respective download locations.
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How to : Install Google Chrome 43.0 (Stable) on Fedora, CentOS, Mageia and OpenSUSE
Install Google Chrome 43.0 (Stable) on Fedora 22, Fedora 21, Fedora 20, CentOS 6, CentOS 5, Mageia 5, Mageia 4, Mandriva and OpenSUSE 13.2, OpenSUSE 13.1
Google Chrome, or Chrome, is a web browser software that tries to compete with major players, such as Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer, Safari, and even the Opera web browser. It is available for the Linux, Android, iOS, Microsoft Windows, and Mac OS X operating systems. But Google Chrome is more than a web browser, as it combines sophisticated open source technology, borrowed from the Chromium application, into a minimal design, all in order to help users surf the web much faster, a lot easier, and safer than ever before.
Features at a glance
A unique functionality of the Google Chrome application is its ability to search the web directly from the address bar. Just type one or more words in the address bar and immediately get suggestions for popular web pages. The application displays thumbnails of your top websites on the new tab page, a function that is popularly called Speed Dial. This functionality is also available on other similar products, and it allows you to easily access your favorite web pages instantly, with lightning speed, from any new tab.
While the first iteration of Chrome 43 (the first version promoted from the Beta to the Stable channel) brought 37 bug-fixes, Chrome 43 has been updated yet again (Chrome 43.0.2357.124 being promoted), updating the Flash Player to version 18.0.0.160 and bringing security fixes.
Installation instructions:
Google Chrome is available via the Google repositories for all the popular Linux systems, so installing and keeping Chrome up to date will be easy.
How to install the latest version of Chrome on Fedora, CentOS and derivative systems:
to install Google Chrome 43.0 (Stable) on Fedora 22, Fedora 21, Fedora 20 and CentOS 6, CentOS 5 derivative systems, open a new Terminal window and bash (get it?) in the following commands:
Instructions for both 32 bit and 64 bit systems:
Add the repository to your system:
$ sudo su
$ cat << EOF > /etc/yum.repos.d/google-chrome.repo
[google-chrome]
name=google-chrome - \$basearch
baseurl=http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/rpm/stable/\$basearch
enabled=1
gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=https://dl-ssl.google.com/linux/linux_signing_key.pub
EOF
Update the local repository index and install the google-chrome-stable package:
$ sudo yum update
$ sudo yum install google-chrome-stable
Optional, to remove Chrome, from both 32 bit and 64 bit systems, do:
$ sudo yum remove google-chrome-stable
How to install the latest version of Chrome on OpenSUSE and derivative systems:
to install Google Chrome 43.0 (Stable) on OpenSUSE 13.2, OpenSUSE 13.1 derivative systems, open a new Terminal window and bash (get it?) in the following commands:
Instructions for 32 bit systems:
$ sudo zypper ar http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/rpm/stable/i386 Google-Chrome
$ sudo zypper refresh
$ sudo zypper install google-chrome-stable
Instructions for 64 bit systems:
$ sudo zypper ar http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/rpm/stable/x86_64 Google-Chrome
$ sudo zypper refresh
$ sudo zypper install google-chrome-stable
Optional, to remove Chrome, from both 32 bit and 64 bit systems, do:
$ sudo zypper remove google-chrome-stable
How to install the latest version of Chrome on Mageia, OpenMandriva and derivative systems:
to install Google Chrome 43.0 (Stable) on Mageia 5, Mageia 4 and Mandriva derivative systems, open a new Terminal window and bash (get it?) in the following commands:
Instructions for 32 bit systems:
$ sudo rpm --import https://dl-ssl.google.com/linux/linux_signing_key.pub
$ sudo urpmi.addmedia --update chrome_i386 http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/rpm/stable/i386
$ sudo urpmi google-chrome-stable
Instructions for 64 bit systems:
$ sudo rpm --import https://dl-ssl.google.com/linux/linux_signing_key.pub
$ sudo urpmi.addmedia --update chrome_x86_64 http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/rpm/stable/x86_64
$ sudo urpmi google-chrome-stable
Optional, to remove Chrome, from both 32 bit and 64 bit systems, do:
$ sudo urpme google-chrome-stable
Enjoy! I hope this article adding you more clarity.
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