

It’s based on mpv. VLC isn’t.
Ultimately, the real comparison is here is just ffmpeg
vs ffmpeg
, but some people prefer mpv defaults over VLC. Search and you’ll find many many comparisons of the two.
It’s based on mpv. VLC isn’t.
Ultimately, the real comparison is here is just ffmpeg
vs ffmpeg
, but some people prefer mpv defaults over VLC. Search and you’ll find many many comparisons of the two.
There’s only one day of the year when you can dupe me this well. Well done
I don’t develop distributed applications, but Im not understanding how it simplifies dependency management. Isn’t it just shifting the work into the app bundle? Stuff still has to be updated or replaced all the time, right?
That’s correct. This simplifies the dependency management system because not every distribution ships with every version of every package, so when software requires a version of a package that the distro dosesn’t ship with or have in its repositories, the end user has to either build the package from source, or find some other way to run their software. Flatpaks developers will define the versions of dependencies that are required for an application to run and that exact version is pulled in when the flatpak is installed. This makes the issue of every distro not having every version of every package moot.
Don’t maintainers have to release new bundles if they contain dependencies with vulnerabilities?
They don’t have to, no. But they absolutely should.
Is it because developers are often using dependencies that are ahead of release versions?
Sometimes, yes. Or the software is using a dependency that is so old that it’s no longer included in a distro’s package repositories.
Also, how is it so much better than images for your applications on Docker Hub?
I would say they’re suited to different purposes.
Docker shines when availability is a concern and replication is desired. It’s fantastic for running a swarm of applications spread across multiple machines automatically managing their lifecycles based on load. In general though, I wouldn’t use Docker containers to run graphical applications. Most images are not suited for this by default, and would require you install a bunch of additional packages before you could consider running any graphical apps. Solutions to run graphical applications in Docker do exist (see x11docker
), but it doesn’t really seem like a common practice.
Flatpaks are designed to integrate into an existing desktops that already have a graphical environment running. Some flatpaks include the packages required for hardware acceleration (Steam, OBS) which can eliminate the need for those packages to be available via your distro’s package manager.
What this means is that a distro like Alpine Linux that doesn’t have an nvidia
package in its repos can still run Steam because the Steam flatpak includes the nvidia
driver if you have an nvidia GPU installed.
Never say never, I guess, but nothing about flatpak really appeals to my instincts. I really just want to know if it’s something I should adopt, or if I can continue to blissfully ignore.
¯_(ツ)_/¯ It’s a tool. Use it when it’s useful, or don’t.
I’ve never understood this. You go through all the trouble of switching OSes, presumably because you don’t like something about it, and then proceed to make it look exactly like what you had?
What’s hard to understand about familiarity?
For-gy-o
Now there’s a winner. F-Orgy-O. Like a Federated Orgy.
Yeah this was an update from June. I’ve been using Rider 2024.2 when writing C# for my own personal Godot project(s) for the last month or so. I can say it’s been pretty smooth. All of the friction I encountered was mostly in setup. You have to point Rider at your Godot binary to ensure it can launch the editor, specific scenes, or a headless language server. This was slightly difficult at first because I was using the Godot flatpak, but I got it sorted out. Most features you’d expect (syntax highlighting, goto definition/invocation, automatic imports, etc.) are there and the IDE is capable of launching specific packed scenes or the editor itself if you need it. I can’t speak to how this plugin compares to other engine plugins (Unity), but I have yet to run into any issues.
I’m not so sure about all perpetual licenses being scams. I’ve personally used Jetbrain’s perpetual fallback license for the 2018 version of their IDEs for 4+ years until I decided to renew. I never once felt scammed there, so I would say there IS a right way to do perpetual licenses.
I can’t remember how I rescued it now but managed to get it back without a reinstall
You could’ve booted into a previous generation where you still had all those things on your system. The glory of atomic distros :)
I did for some time. There’s beauty in the simplicity and flexibility of Alpine, plus BusyBox is great once you understand all the weird quirks between it and coreutils
. As unpopular as it might be, I actually really like OpenRC. Alpine feels pretty close to BSD if you’re familiar with that family of operating systems. These days I use it for just about all my servers save for a few Nix boxes.
If you decide to explore this route, here are a couple tools I found useful at the start:
Also might behoove you to check out Alpine community’s documentation on chroots in case you need specific software that isn’t available otherwise.
Since no one answered you here, I’ll say distrochooser.de isn’t bad at all. For the new linux user who is comfortable enough trying new things, I think it’s perfect. It does lose its usefulness if you’ve already tried all of the options it offers, but at that point you probably don’t need distrochooser anyway.
The Asahi Linux project provides a Fedora-based experience for people using Apple Silicon. It works well for the most part but there are features that are still being developed.
As for Windows, I don’t know of any methods to get Windows running outside of macOS, but many people utilize Parallels for Windows apps or the desktop experience.
I can reccommend Trilium. I think it has what you’re looking for. |
Nevermind. Looks like the project is in maintenance mode for now.
For you and anyone else curious to find something similar to Foobar2k on Linux, there’s DeaDBeeF. I used to use it way back before I switched to ncmpcpp