Lmao removeds. I’m leaving
Lmao removeds. I’m leaving
There are different species of humans. Dont really care what the current media says.
Saw it too. Nice reference
mom I’m seeing Nazis everywhere again
Your meds sweetheart, take them.
Yes. Refused to work for apple as a soft. Eng. They were offering around 50k more. Ill never buy apple products either even if they come with infinite battery.
if the camel bit me and I punched him, how long will it take it for lemmy.world to receive its next DDoS attack?
The only good think of that distro is their green color.
No, the real engineers design and supervise everything. High skilled technicians assemble everything through the engineers guidance
BC it’s easier for the any dev to package their program for flatpaks assuring it’ll work in all distributions, otherwise you have to wait for your package manager maintainer to repackage the program for your system. Which is what happens for Arch, debian, Suse, Fedora.
It’s not Thunderbird/program responsibility if they decided to make flatpaks the main source of distribution yet you decide to install it through other means. Which idk if they did but more devs are opting to distribute through flatpaks.
What’s this, first time hearing about it
It’s being replaced by another tec that does use Wayland. All functionalities will still be there
Even SK have friends and families, touch grass dumbass
look at me, I like being a contrarian outcast
Your meds pal, take them
Generally speaking, the advantages of Flatpaks are:
-The developers only need to maintain and release one version
-It’s sandboxed, for each app you can decide which parts of your filesystem are exposed, which env variables, which types of inter-process communications, etc
-You kinda avoid dependency hell. You can use old unmaintained packages because Flatpak will provide old versions of their dependency if they’re needed, while at the same time avoiding unnecessarily duplicated packages
-All installed apps are in your .var folder instead of being system-wide. Every app has its own folder with its own .config and .local/share inside, with their respective config files and data
-It supports partial updates
-It doesn’t require root permissions to use
-It lets you use the most recent software even in really old LTS systems like Debian, and the Flatpaks updates are usually as quick as rolling release distros
-You don’t need to abuse PPAs or the AUR
-It makes your system updates actually faster since you’ll have less system packages, and you’ll be able to update your big apps separately
I may be missing some, but those are the most important to me
There is more big improvement development for flatpaks?
its Nvidias fault not Linux. Bitch to them
Use Linux