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  3. Fan of Flatpaks ...or Not?

Fan of Flatpaks ...or Not?

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  • eta@feddit.orgE [email protected]

    Is there no other way on your system to see what the default browser is? On Gnome you can see a few of your default applications in the settings. And what happens if you open an html file for example? Does it open in Zen? If yes then it appears that Zen is set as your default browser, what more is there to check?

    B This user is from outside of this forum
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    [email protected]
    wrote on last edited by
    #269

    Functionally, it's the default because links do open in it, but why isn't it able to tell that it's already set?

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    • mystvalkyrie@lemmy.blahaj.zoneM [email protected]

      There was a few years where I pretty much only used Flatpaks because I was scared of the terminal. But now that I've learned how to use the terminal, it's so much more convenient because I can quickly update all my applications all in one place without having to open a separate app. Plus, some Flatpaks can fall really behind on software updates.

      There might be a Linux userbase someday where no one other than developers actually knows how to use the terminal, because users can run everything they want without a command line, but maybe that's actually a good thing because it'll drive up how many people use a Linux distro.

      With Windows and Mac, there's a shareholder incentive to enshittify. With Linux, if a distro goes bad and gets commercialized, there's always another distro people can move to, not to mention there's no financial incentive. The more people get on Linux, the less power these tech companies have. Personally, that and privacy are what drew me to Linux much more so than being able to tinker or fine-tune my experience.

      C This user is from outside of this forum
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      wrote on last edited by
      #270

      Yeah I just wanted off mr corporation's wild ride

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      • Z [email protected]

        The parent comment mentions working on security for a paid OS, so looking at the perspective of something like the users of RHEL and SUSE: supply chain "paranoia" absolutely does matter a lot to enterprise users, many of which are bound by contract to specific security standards (especially when governments are involved). I noted that concerns at that level are rather meaningless to home users.

        On a personal system, people generally do whatever they need to in order to get the software they want. Those things I listed are very common options for installing software outside of your distro's repos, and all of them offer less inherent vetting than Flathub while also tampering with your system more substantially. Though most of them at least use system libraries.

        they added “bash scripts you find online”, which are only a problem if you don’t look them over or cannot understand them

        I would honestly expect that the vast majority of people who see installation steps including curl [...] | sh (so common that even reputable projects like cargo/rust recommend it) simply run the command as-is without checking the downloaded script, and likewise do the same even if it's sudo sh. That can still be more or less fine if you trust the vendor/host, its SSL certificate, and your ability to type/copy the domain without error. Even if you look at the script, that might not get you far if it happens to be a self-extracting one unless you also check its payload.

        M This user is from outside of this forum
        M This user is from outside of this forum
        [email protected]
        wrote on last edited by [email protected]
        #271

        Yea, that's why I added the, "not that they're wrong..." part. Interesting how no one actually understands what those simple words mean.

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        • shrewdcat@lemmy.zipS [email protected]
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          wrote on last edited by
          #272

          I like flatpak, but I can't download Flathub flatpak applications and (specially) Flathub flatpak runtimes from my phone. I hope Flathub learns from F-Droid

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          • shrewdcat@lemmy.zipS [email protected]
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            wrote on last edited by
            #273

            I'm happy to use Flatpaks but the annoyances I've had are like when one application says to use you'll need to point to the binary of another application that it depends on but very understandably doesn't package together, figuring that out to me can be annoying so I'll switch to a regular installation and it all just works together no fuss, no flatseal, no thinking about it really. Also some applications where it's really nice to launch from the terminal especially with arguments or just like the current working directory and with Flatpaks instead of just right off the bat it's application name and hit enter, Flatpak hope you remember the whole package name

            org.wilson.spalding.runner.knife.ApplicationName ...

            Ya alias but got to remember to do that. So far anything I'd ever want to run from terminal, no Flatpak

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            • D [email protected]

              The person you're replying to is talking about the permissions manager flatseal, not flatpaks

              O This user is from outside of this forum
              O This user is from outside of this forum
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              wrote on last edited by
              #274

              Oops. I got confused

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              • P [email protected]

                I've never had a problem with flatpaks or snaps.

                W This user is from outside of this forum
                W This user is from outside of this forum
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                wrote on last edited by
                #275

                I think people who dislike flatpaks or similar aren't having "problems". They work, but they're using using a sledgehammer to drive a nail.

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                • shrewdcat@lemmy.zipS [email protected]
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                  wrote on last edited by
                  #276

                  As long as software is available in the Software Manager to be installed that way... I don't care what format it's in.

                  But don't make normies go to the terminal. It's inhumane, and really does not help the masses get away from big tech - which is a worthier goal than keeping your software terminal-only.

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                  • shrewdcat@lemmy.zipS [email protected]
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                    wrote on last edited by [email protected]
                    #277

                    While I wouldn't want flakpak going deep into the OS I think the advantage of using them on the desktop is obvious. Developers can release to multiple dists from a single build and end users get updates and versions immediately rather than waiting for the dist to update its packages. Plus the ability to lock the software down with sandboxes.

                    The tradeoff is disk consumption but it's not really that big of a deal. Flatpaks are layered so apps can share dependencies. e.g. if the app is GNOME it can share the GNOME runtime with other apps and doesn't need to ship with its own.

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                    • shrewdcat@lemmy.zipS [email protected]
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                      wrote on last edited by
                      #278

                      Perhaps ironically, this is mocking a strawman. Flatpacks can be installed and managed using the terminal! Not only that but Linux-Distros have had graphical package managers for decades.

                      The primary reason that distros have embraced flatpack / snap / appimage is that they promise to lower the burden of managing software repositories. The primary reason that some users are mad is that these often don't provide a good experience:

                      • they are often slower to install/start/run
                      • they have trouble integrating with the rest of the system (ignoring gtk/qt themes for example)
                      • they take a lot more space and bandwidth

                      Theoretically they are also more secure... But reality of that has also been questioned. Fine grained permissions are nice, but bundling libraries makes it hard to know what outdated libraries are running on the systems.

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                      • hallettj@leminal.spaceH [email protected]

                        My guess was the point is that it's difficult to install CLI tools using Flatpak

                        ferk@lemmy.mlF This user is from outside of this forum
                        ferk@lemmy.mlF This user is from outside of this forum
                        [email protected]
                        wrote on last edited by [email protected]
                        #279

                        Installing them is not difficult. It's the same as any other flatpak.

                        The problem is when running them (actually, when running any flatpak, not just CLI tools) you need to type out the whole backwards domain thingy that flatpaks use as identifier, instead of having a proper typical and simple executable name like they would have if they were installed normally.

                        I end up adding either symlinks or aliases for all my flatpaks because of this reason. After doing that it's ok.. but it's just an extra step that's annoying and that the flatpak devs have no interest on fixing apparently.

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                        • C [email protected]

                          I seem to have constant issues with AppImages. Every single one I have currently won't open. I get an error message relating to either qT or GTK. Tried searching for the error and get a bunch of old forum threads talking about either not being compatible with Wayland at all, or comments stating that the one specific AppImage in question must have been "packaged badly". Thankfully, nothing 'mission critical' for me is an AppImage currently, but it is quite upsetting that I have the most problems with the supposed "just works" app packaging/distribution option.

                          ferk@lemmy.mlF This user is from outside of this forum
                          ferk@lemmy.mlF This user is from outside of this forum
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                          wrote on last edited by [email protected]
                          #280

                          Yes, Flatpak is overall a better approach when compared to AppImages, since being dependent on a known runtime ensures the program will run whenever the runtime is available.

                          What I wish they would add is a way to run the flatpak in a portable way. Because as it stands, AppImages is the only option for that. Flatpak doesn't really allow to have a portable installation in a pendrive, for example. At the moment there's no replacement for AppImage in such use cases, which is a pity.

                          But there's no fundamental technical design roadblock in flatpak that would prevent it from supporting this in the future, imho. theoretically one could create a program that mounts the flatpak file into a ramfs layered with the runtime and run it.

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                          • default_defect@midwest.socialD [email protected]

                            My favorite part of the linux experience is the FREEDOM, but also being talked down to for not using my freedom correctly, I should only do things a specific way or I might as well just use windows.

                            ferk@lemmy.mlF This user is from outside of this forum
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                            wrote on last edited by [email protected]
                            #281

                            You are mixing different ideas of freedom.
                            Software freedom is not the same as freedom of choice of software.

                            You don't need Linux to have choices of what software to use, you have that in most (all?) proprietary systems, in some you might even have more choices than in Linux.. even if it includes proprietary software.

                            This is analogous to how being a free person (not a slave) is not the same as having freedom to choose who to work for, even if some of them are slavers (ie. having freedom to choose your master).

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                            • J [email protected]

                              you (rhetorical you, not you) can recommend not using the AUR officially all you want. it doesn’t mean anything if a large number of tasks the average user is going to do require AUR packages. i’m kind of drunk rn but i’ll go find specific pages of the wiki that demonstrate what i’m talking about, i stg this isn’t nothing. the core system itself can entirely be managed with pacman, yes, but the average user is going to be doing a lot more than just that. there is a certain discord in the messaging of arch as a whole.

                              this is exactly my point. arch can either be a nuts and bolts distro or it can be made for normies. it can’t be both.

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                              wrote on last edited by
                              #282

                              it doesn’t mean anything if a large number of tasks the average user is going to do require AUR packages

                              You keep saying this but can you give any concrete examples? I don't recall coming across anything like this.

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                              • S [email protected]

                                The issue I have with flatpaks is the size for most applications. It just doesn't make sense for me. Not that it's not useful and has it's purposes.

                                toribor@corndog.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
                                toribor@corndog.socialT This user is from outside of this forum
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                                wrote on last edited by
                                #283

                                Fast storage is one of the cheapest components of modern PCs so I'm always surprised when Flatpak file size is brought up. It's not something I worry about very much.

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                                • S [email protected]

                                  The issue I have with flatpaks is the size for most applications. It just doesn't make sense for me. Not that it's not useful and has it's purposes.

                                  H This user is from outside of this forum
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                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #284

                                  and has it’s purposes

                                  Unlike that apostrophe.

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                                  • A [email protected]

                                    While I wouldn't want flakpak going deep into the OS I think the advantage of using them on the desktop is obvious. Developers can release to multiple dists from a single build and end users get updates and versions immediately rather than waiting for the dist to update its packages. Plus the ability to lock the software down with sandboxes.

                                    The tradeoff is disk consumption but it's not really that big of a deal. Flatpaks are layered so apps can share dependencies. e.g. if the app is GNOME it can share the GNOME runtime with other apps and doesn't need to ship with its own.

                                    R This user is from outside of this forum
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                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #285

                                    FTFY: Flatpaks are layered so apps can share dependencies. e.g. if the app is GNOME 4.2.11.3 it can share the GNOME 4.2.11.3 runtime with other apps and doesn't need to ship with its own, but every app requires a different GNOME version anyway

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                                    • C [email protected]

                                      I seem to have constant issues with AppImages. Every single one I have currently won't open. I get an error message relating to either qT or GTK. Tried searching for the error and get a bunch of old forum threads talking about either not being compatible with Wayland at all, or comments stating that the one specific AppImage in question must have been "packaged badly". Thankfully, nothing 'mission critical' for me is an AppImage currently, but it is quite upsetting that I have the most problems with the supposed "just works" app packaging/distribution option.

                                      I This user is from outside of this forum
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                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #286

                                      Yeah that's why I'm a bit weary of switching to Wayland, so many apps still seem unsupported, or have issues, whereas on X11 everything for me just works. Plus, the two DE's I'd actually consider using either don't have Wayland support at all or have very early experimental support (Cinnamon and Xfce) so it'll still be a while for me before I am able to consider switching to Wayland, assuming everything else works.

                                      C 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • shrewdcat@lemmy.zipS [email protected]
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                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #287

                                        Size and gnome/GTK dependencies are main reasons why I don't use Flatpaks (I have nothing against gnome though, it just pulls in too much and KDE is worse in this regards, which is why I use Sway and River)

                                        S 1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • J [email protected]

                                          saying it can happen in the AUR feels disingenuous to me when you consider how integrated the AUR is to the arch ecosystem. this is a genuine complaint from a user perspective and is an issue with the design philosophy imo. it is a special case but it’s so frequent as to be annoying, is my point.

                                          not sure why everyone is replying like i’m unaware and totally ignoring the actual grievance i have. im very well aware of pacman and yay’s intended behaviors, i just think they’re shit in some cases. idk if people who say this have never tried to daily drive arch before or something but the AUR is absolutely not optional unless you want to constantly hand roll your own shit. see my edit to the original comment.

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                                          wrote on last edited by [email protected]
                                          #288

                                          Feyd did a pretty good job of outlining the AUR disclaimers in a different comment so I won't do that here. It's true that Arch won't stop you from shooting yourself in the foot, but again it's nuts to claim that routine compiling is the usual case for all rolling distros and belies your claim that you're familiar with usual case experience. There's absolutely no routine experience where you're regularly compiling.

                                          I've used debian and apt-get most of my life, I've used arch on a pinetab 2 for about 6 months, regularly playing with pacman and yay and someone who's never met me is saying I'm a fanboy for being familiar with linux package management. 🤷‍♂️

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