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Thread 106543101

12 posts 4 images /g/
Anonymous No.106543101 [Report] >>106543109 >>106543211 >>106543271 >>106543333 >>106543343 >>106543591
what did flatpak mean by this?
Anonymous No.106543109 [Report] >>106543158
>>106543101 (OP)
Don't tell me that drivers are Flatpak'd too?
Anonymous No.106543158 [Report] >>106543312
>>106543109
and its a good thing.
Anonymous No.106543182 [Report]
What's the matter? Running out of space on your 60GB spinny disk?
Anonymous No.106543211 [Report]
>>106543101 (OP)
>23.08
Maybe you shouldn't use obsolete unmaintained software?
And did you expect from backwards compatible solutions? There's a reason why clean Windows 11 and Android take 60GiB of space?
Anonymous No.106543255 [Report]
202d2d6e6f2d70726573657276652d726f6f74202f
Anonymous No.106543271 [Report]
>>106543101 (OP)
It's pythonic
Anonymous No.106543312 [Report]
>>106543158
Drivers in userspace, sandboxed at that, sounds really dumb to me.
Anonymous No.106543333 [Report]
>>106543101 (OP)
I means that different packages are using different versions of dependencies, blame those maintainers for not being up to date. Windows does this for every program.
Anonymous No.106543343 [Report] >>106543379
>>106543101 (OP)
sometimes flatpak is the only choice, honestly appimages are just not intuitive fo me, i don't understand how it makes sense to just place an .appimage somewhere and run it as an appkication, with 0 integration. apt / packages are always the best, but appimages are
Anonymous No.106543379 [Report]
>>106543343
..appimages are just so, less than basic, don't see any point in them unless you have 0 alternative and need only funcionality
Anonymous No.106543591 [Report]
>>106543101 (OP)
ever tried flatpak uninstall --unused ?