<< you can do a network install of suse remotely. i would say you wasted your time downloading 5+gig of data. >>
Exactly. A typical FTP install only sucks about 500 MB of files (RPMs are nicely compressed).
The only case for wasting 5 GB of bandwidth (remember it may be free to the end user, but traffic is certainly not gratis) is if you're planning on hosting your own internal "mirror" for multiple client installations.
I do wish SuSE still offerred a 1 CD real Eval ISO, but they decided that business-wise, they wanted to push their retail distro. While financially they are still on shaky ground, it's good to see their unit growth last year in North America was strong.
I personally believe that within 2 years, the only significant distros left standing are Red Hat, SuSE, Mandrake and Debian. There will be plenty of other fringe distros, but if you're planning on a commercial distro at this point in the game, it's too late. Note that both SuSE and Mandrake aren't assured of survivial either, and Debian will always have limited commercial success (which isn't their goal anyway).