• Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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    5 hours ago

    Ah yes, the 10-year corporate-grade security support for communiry packages provided for free to small users. I use it on the machines I haven’t converted to Debian yet. It’s great.

      • Baggie@lemmy.zip
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        2 hours ago

        Not op, but I use Ubuntu because I will need a job at some point and want to use something relatively marketable.

        Snaps are annoying, I tried to use them once for something and then have basically ignored them. They aren’t hugely core as something in windows would be.

      • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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        1 hour ago

        In my opinion Snaps are superior in terms of design and functionality than Flatpak. In practice, there are many poorly implemented snap packages. There were annoying bugs with the snap system for a long time like the update/close app notification. There’s not enough features for holding snap updates. And there isn’t built-in support for multiple repos. I like Snap but there have been legitimate problems with it (along with a lot of illegitimate ones) and the mindshare has shifted to Flatpak, which albeit inferior, fulfils most of the Snap use cases. In the end the social infrastructure is more important than the exact technology and that’s much stronger around Flatpak. I use both on Ubuntu and only Flatpak on Debian.

        If it matters, I’m a senior software guy who’s used Linux professionally for many use cases for 10-15 years. Been personally using Ubuntu since 2005. Am switching new machines to Debian because Canonical is planning to do IPO and enshittifaction would inevitably follow. Not because of Snap. 😅

        • BlameTheAntifa@lemmy.world
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          1 hour ago

          In my opinion Snaps are superior in terms of design and functionality than Flatpak.

          You are now my enemy.

          Snaps was one of the earlier enshittification indicators, and the point where I jumped ship.

          • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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            54 minutes ago

            I’ve been following Snap since it was called Click back in 2011-13 because it was solving a lot of problems that the classic, trusted package management had and still has. Problems that were elegantly solved on Android with the APK package and sandboxing system. That was pretty exciting so I might have a somewhat different perspective. :D