this post was submitted on 04 Mar 2024
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I'll be voted down but...
This is the shit you get from kids who grew up with "app stores."
What the hell are you talking about? Did you even read the post? They literally praise native package managers, statically linked binaries and even .tar archives over appimages. If you don't have any actual arguments against their point, you don't have to make shit up, you know? Using BS ad hominem to dismiss someones opinion isn't a great look.
Man what a braindead take.
Firstly, you're not adressing the fact that your BS Ad hominem didn't even make sense. You're calling OP a "kids who grew up with “app stores”" when they are talking about prefering to get a .tar over appimages. You're now even doubling down with "That “terminal” app is scary!". I know having actual arguments is hard, but maybe just think for a second before writing something, particularly if you're so desperately trying to be snarky.
Secondly having to using the terminal is fine for experienced user who like the efficiency of it and makes sense for more advanced cli apps or development tools, but for app that are meant for an average it's just a needlessly shitty experience. Same goes for having to look up the website to download a random package from the internet that you're going to run uncontained on your system. Given how easy it is to game the SEO to land at the top, this is just begging for a virus and is an absolutely garbage system.
And it really doesn't need to be this way given that we already have better working alternatives.
You also dont use the Terminal for Appimages, its all shitty GUI patterns taken from Windows UX.
Yeah - probably. Not everything is Shakespeare.
Lucky kids. I remember when I switched to Linux and encountered my first app store (Synaptic). That was already such a huge improvement over random
.exe
s, and app stores today are way, way better.Damn even i was impressed by apt install command so much the first time
Package managers are fine. Walled gardens are not.
Absolutely. Luckily there are plenty of non-walled garden solutions on Linux, e.g. Flatpak.
I mean, snap could also be not. Just somebody needs to write a wrapper that allows to download, verify etc. .snap packages from other repos.
Shitty move of Canonical for sure.
i think those kids got a point -- app stores are easier than finding random executables on the web
it can sometimes be a pain to find the original developper's website to get a legitimate copy of the software from, especially for non-technical users.
the main issue with app stores is that they're often closed ecosystems, where there's only one app provider. that's not the case with flatpatk!
And yours is from people who are missing any security awareness and think windows is great because you can double click any executable and don’t need to waste any thought on isolation and privileges.
The linux people and their repositories...