The openEuler system open source community built by has recently formed a DDE special interest group (SIG) to enrich the system's desktop environment and the first maintainer is the China-made UOS developer Union Tech.
With the establishment of the DDE SIG, participants and users of the openEuler community will have access to the latest information maintained by a dedicated team of professionals. The DDE version of the desktop environment is supported by the openEuler community.
Union Tech said today that as an operating system leader, it will be working with many other companies in the future. DDE is a full-featured desktop environment developed by Union Tech to provide users with an easy-to-use interface and interaction.
DDE is Union Tech's self-developed full-featured desktop environment that provides users with an easy-to-use and beautiful interface to interact with. It has been ported to Archlinux, OpenSUSE, Ubuntu, LinuxMint. Fedora, Manjaro and other mainstream Linux distributions.
The operating system Deepin with DDE is also among the world's top 10 operating open source systems.
Union Tech has now integrated the latest version of DDE into the UOS Server Euler.
It is based on the openEuler 20.03 LTS (Linux 4.19 kernel) community distribution.
openEuler is the open source version of Huawei's server operating system EulerOS and is a free Linux distribution platform.
It is an open community that works with developers around the world to build an open, diverse and architecturally inclusive software ecosystem.
It is also an innovation platform where anyone is encouraged to contribute new ideas, pioneer new concepts and implement new solutions.
Through community collaboration, openEuler builds a platform for innovation, a unified and open software ecosystem that supports multi-processor architectures, and a unified and open software architecture.
There are already many operating system vendors participating and contributing to the openEuler community.
These include iSoft Infrastructure Software Co. Kylin, Institute of Software, Chinese Academy of Sciences, and Turbolinux, among others, have all released their own publications based on the commercial distribution of openEuler.
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