fireshell,
@fireshell@lemmy.ml avatar

It is noteworthy that builds of Chrome, VLC, Dolphin, Steam and Spotify are created by third-party enthusiasts not associated with the main projects.

What great news, that’s why there is no trust in Flathub.

kylian0087,

I mean it is still miles ahead of snaps and the snap store

nexussapphire,

Why don’t you open an feature request on their git if you have an issue with volunteer work.

It’s funny thinking this guy uses a distro package manager potentially with unofficial patches applied to the package.

ssm,
@ssm@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

Flatpak’s usecase for me is Alpine Linux and other distributions that use musl or other libc implementations. I don’t love it, I think its cli interface and the way you add flatpak servers to be obtuse and annoying, but it is useful for getting glibc dependent software.

bitfucker,

Another alternative is distrobox and bedrock linux.

MicrondeMMMMMMM,
@MicrondeMMMMMMM@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

FOSS keeps winning it’s Insane!

iaMLoWiQ,

Google is better at advertising anyways. No sane being has ever heard of flathub. Qndroid has billion downloads every week.

paris, (edited )

I imagine the largest mobile phone operating system on the planet has a few more downloads than one of the several available package managers for the comparatively very small desktop Linux audience, yeah. This is the Linux community, not the Android or Google community, so I’m not sure what you’re yapping away about or why.

edit: i wanted to know how many devices run android and according to this it’s three billion so you’re wrong anyway lmao

starman, (edited )
@starman@programming.dev avatar

Still not as good as native package

LemmyHead,

Good is relative tbf. I’ve had issues installing something natively while installing flatpak just worked

MicrondeMMMMMMM,
@MicrondeMMMMMMM@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Sure yeah but its what we have. I’m personally rooting for nixpkgs but they might be too complicated to setup for the average Joe.

Frostbeard, (edited )

What’s the issue? I installed mint because I know fuckall about Linux, and tbh it’s a dice toss if I have used the Flatpak option not knowing what the actual difference between them are

SimplyTadpole,
@SimplyTadpole@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

Honestly, you don’t have to worry about what others say, you should use what works best for you. Personally I find them to be nice and comfortable to use, myself 😅

Liz,

Flatpak “containerizes” the program, which makes it more secure and less able to accidentally mess up other programs. Fuck if I know how it works.

Also you don’t have to type in your password every time you want to update the program, so that’s nice.

MicrondeMMMMMMM,
@MicrondeMMMMMMM@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I’ll add upon what others have said here, for me the main downside is the size they take on disk since they don’t really share dependencies (they do but not as efficiently as native or nix packages) so they take a lot of room and take a while to update. Otherwise they’re amazing IMO and you should use them! :)

Petter1,

Thing is, if your flatpak software needs something not in its container, it gets a little complicated, because first you have to realise what exactly the problem is and secondly you have to use something like flatseal to give it access to wathever it needs to work (no real help there)

So this was what took me back to pacman (or better said yay)

istanbullu,

nice

lord_ryvan,

Oh wow, a lot of people use it in countries with a lot of people!

gigachad,
JasonDJ,

Pet peeve : implying DFW has a bigger furry scene than Austin. For some reason I doubt that.

jwt,

Except that the download numbers don’t correspond at all with the population numbers.

balder1993,

Only Brazil is there because it has a big population.

Malgas,
lord_ryvan,

@Gigachad already mentioned it

Jolteon,

looks at India and China

I’m not seeing it.

mrvictory1,

Brazil has so many downloads

lemmynparty,

Lol, what a pointless map.
It’s impossible to tell at a glance which countries have more or less downloads, other than a couple of countries with a slightly lighter colour.

jsomae,

Yeah, they could have applied a logarithm or something.

lord_ryvan,

And included a legend, such as a colour bar

Dayroom7485,

Also, no novelty - strong reject, no revision possible 🙂‍↔️

lord_ryvan,

What do you mean?

Tiempo,

Such a Rev2!

electricprism,

MVP

SendMePhotos,

Does that count for when an OS is wiped and reinstalled or a nerd has like 3 computers and keeps OS flipping?

independantiste,
@independantiste@sh.itjust.works avatar

In that case you should use user-install flatpaks and separating and reusing your /home partition

Spiffyman,

I went a step further and have user-installed flatpaks with a custom flatpak directory so everything installs on a separate small hard drive. If the whole system goes down (usually due to my testing things!), I can reinstall set up the custom flatpak and everything works again. In theory. But it borks inter-flatpak communication (flatseal cannot find any other flatpaks and is thus unusable). I moved over to distrobox (which has its own issues, but works better for the OS wiped/reinstall scenario).

notenoughbutter,

I’m sorry

jsomae,

I’d prefer to see downloads per country per capita.

luciferofastora,

Right? “Oh look, country with huge population has more downloads than country with small population!”

delirious_owl,
@delirious_owl@discuss.online avatar

Great opportunity to inject malware to so many vulnerable peeps then

lord_ryvan,

You could say that with any program distribution. At least flatpaks are containerised.

delirious_owl,
@delirious_owl@discuss.online avatar

Nah. Most distro package managers verify their packages authenticity with cryptography since the early noughts

umbrella,
@umbrella@lemmy.ml avatar

i hope it does 20 billion

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