Which basically means your least favorite thing about flatpak is flatpak.
Don’t get me wrong,but why do you think it’s so easy to install apps via flatpak?
For me the benefit of having dependencies containerized is well worth the wasted space or system dependency incompatibilities.
Oh yeah for sure, I just thought it was funny. I explicitly install most things through my primary package manager, but for some things in my use case, Flatpak is definitely the call!
I don’t understand (im new to Linux)
So, I only have 3 applications installed through Flatpak (Bottles, discord-screenaudio, and Protontricks), but for compatibility sake Flatpak will have a few different NVIDIA drivers and their 32bit versions installed for application functionality.
Most of the time, between updates I will have 3-4 different ones installed at any given time. It’s nothing super upsetting, but it is “Mildly Infuriating” as its a slight loss of a couple gigabytes of space.
ah that makes a lot more sense, thanks!
as an aside, how has discord-screenaudio been working for you? I saw a couple reviews that said it might steal my discord credentials and held off getting it, but it’d be really nice to be able to share my screen with audio again
I have a secondary discord account I use primarily for streaming, It works pretty well and I haven’t had any issues.
I used to use the secondary account in a web browser and manually patch in the audio to it’s mic input with pipewire and a patch bay.
The main reason I use discord-screenaudio is because I’m lazy and it’s slightly faster than manually doing it; Also it allows you to actually have the audio come out from the stream like on the standard windows client, as opposed to using the mic input for audio.
I don’t understand (I have been using linux for 2 years)
Believe me, even after 28y using Linux this is a tough one.
Is flatpack another package manager like snap with it’s own dependency hell?
Yeah. . . basically lol, I only use it for a handful of things; Bottles (To run windows software and non-steam games in a sandbox), discord-screenaudio (To easily stream movies and shows to friends who refuse to leave discord), and Protontricks (To VERY easily install mods for steam games that have a .exe installer).
Seriously Protontricks is amazing, no more extracting exe files to install mods just a simple
protontricks -c ‘wine ~/Downloads/nameOfModOrPatchToInstall.exe’ steamid#forgame
and you click through the installer like you’re on windows.
You sir, are a good friend lol…
Treat others as you wish to be treated!
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It doesn’t optimise storage, it does exactly the opposite. The point is to try to reduce dependencies by having everything in one atomic unit. This means if two programmes would use the same library you waste space by having it installed twice, but if two programmes use different versions of the same library you don’t have dependency problems because they each have their own copy to work from. I can see the pros and cons but personally I don’t have a use for it so I avoids it
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That’s why I don’t use them. I love the idea, don’t get me wrong, but seeing all these gigabytes being taken away from me hurts. lol
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I use xfs since it is the only one that I have zero issues with. Also, I don’t need flatpaks (rarely do), the AUR basically has everything I personally need.
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I can count my installed AUR programs on my fingers.
Wait, what now?
That sounds awesome!
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Especially when it installs into your home partition. That just feels like my personal space has been invaded. Had to link it to a folder in /opt
Lol. I might do that if I install a flatpak
yesterday i tried to delete snap-store, it took firefox with it, and then i got no browser to troubleshoot that.
tried to install firefox from flatpak, it installed it but it disappears after restart.
dealing with linux felt like this lately https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=D7OmauE8FEU
had to reinstall ubuntu 3 facking times :/
Next time install Fedora!
2nd Fedora recommendation in a week!
That is because in ubuntu firefox is installed as snap by default, as for the flatpak version i do not know what happened. If you want firefox as a deb you need to add a ppa and then you can apt install firefox. There are lots of guides. All of these package managers can be confusing at times
i should have known: i didnt have a browser to download anything, i could have downloaded firefox.deb with phone or something then install it
of these package managers can be confusing at times
exactly.
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I don’t know, man. Unless you’re running on ancient hardware does a few gigs even really matter? I’ve got a 1 TB nvme in my box and I’m using like 300 gigs of it, 200 gigs of which are two Steam games and a few different Proton versions. Surely the 2 gigs shown in that screenshot is almost meaningless in a modern system. I mean you can get a 1 TB Samsung EVO for like 60 bucks on Amazon these days.