• 33 Posts
  • 84 Comments
Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: April 30th, 2023

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  • I like Snaps. They can do more than Flatpak and when packaged well they just work. Sadly some apps on Snapcraft are abandoned or they just don’t work, but the same can be said about Flathub.

    Which bridge did they build with snaps?

    Proprietary companies are compelled to release on Snapcraft because it gives them advantages over other packaging methods. I’m just a user but I heard Snaps are easy to work with thanks to the documentation.

    In addition to all of that, Canonical also installs applications as snap when using the apt\£* command line tools.

    Firefox for example isn’t even in their apt repos. So instead of throwing an error, the Firefox meta package installs the snap, and tells you it’s doing that.

    But I understand that Ubuntu isn’t for you if you want to avoid snaps.


  • tsugu@slrpnk.netOPtolinuxmemes@lemmy.worldI enjoy creating conflict
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    17 hours ago

    I think it’s just elitism. The worst example is Chris Titus making a video where he explains why you shouldn’t use Ubuntu. And then proceeds to make video explaining how it’s not actually that bad and he uses it with a different DE.

    But now 300K people saw that Ubuntu bad for stupid reasons, from a “reputable” source.






















  • I don’t see how this matters.

    Let’s look at the very worst case possible scenario: Everyone abandons Flatpak and AppImage and moves to Snapcraft, and Canonical decides to make a decision that destroys the store.

    You can still install FOSS apps from somewhere, at worst compile them.

    All that would be lost if Snapcradt stopped existing are the proprietary apps, which you wouldn’t use anyways.