In general I agree, though had something to add regarding these points:
by defaults the sandbox is pretty good
This is a rather major problem with Flatpak; the maintainer decides what permissions they need by default, not the user. The user needs to retroactively roll them back or specify global options and manually override them per-app, but that’s not user-friendly at all. Though many Flatpaks do have good permissions because Flathub maintainers step in and offer suggestions before approving the Flatpak for publication, there are a number of Flatpaks that punch big holes in the sandbox; so much so that they might as well be unsandboxed.
But Bottles has a great sandbox, for instance, which is just what you’d want when running lots of proprietary Windows applications you maybe don’t trust as much as your Linux-y software.
It’s better than what we have with traditional packages but it can sometimes get in the way and not all beginners can easily figure out how to fix permissions issues with Flatseal. This will probably improve as we get more portals built.
some apps are less maintained and use EOL runtimes etc
not suited for some apps like terminal apps or system stuff
This isn’t really true. It’s only true when terminal applications need privileged access to something. Flathub ships Mesa userpace drivers and NVIDIA’s proprietary userspace drivers just fine. You can package something like yt-dlp in Flatpak just fine with --filesystem=host. Hell, they’ve even got Neovim on Flathub. Sure, it’s a little more cumbersome to type, but you can always create an alias.
You can easily rollback Flatpaks to a previous version (even from a long time ago) with flatpak update--commit. Much harder with traditional package systems, and you’ll probably need to downgrade shared libraries too.
You get a consistent build environment with Flatpak manifests. If you want to build a newer version of a stable package you’re using straight from master or with a few patches, all you really need to do is clone it from flathub/whatever, change a few lines, and it has a very high chance of building properly. No need to figure out dependencies, toolchains, or sane build options. And it’s all controlled from an easy-to-read and modify file.
The default is completely sandboxed. Developers need to allowlist exactly what they want. So it is transparent.
Compare that to a random app where you need to monitor its syscalls to see what it does.
KDE Plasma now includes a GUI settings page that allows to change these.
I think GNOME needs to integrate that into their settings, I mean just include damn Flatseal as a settings page…
specify global options
This is supercool and I started doing that. All apps get the env vars to force Wayland now even though they may not use it. I have my overrides and uploaded them to my dotfiles.
But Bottles has a great sandbox
Echo that
over 1200 unmaintained packages in the Debian repositories, and even over 400 in Arch’s much smaller repositories
This is crazy, same on Fedora. Distros really need to start using separate repos, and automatically filter out everything that didnt get a “I maintain this” for a while.
There are packagers maintaining a shitload of apps at once.
Flathub applications are usually maintained by upstream
Not always but having this at all, and having most big names in there, is incredible. This is like a first time this happens.
easily rollback Flatpaks
Ostree is great
consistent build environment
And having it declared centrally can help add all the security benefits of the individual ones too. Really nice
The default is completely sandboxed. Developers need to allowlist exactly what they want. So it is transparent.
The default before the developer touches it doesn’t matter; compare this to Android, iOS, or macOS’s permission system. An app needs to ask for permission to use the microphone or access your files. With Flatpak, all a developer needs to do is specify --filesystem=home or --socket=pulseaudio and if the user hasn’t specified global options like --nofilesystem=home, then the developer gets access to it. Having a sandbox that is optional for the developer rather goes against the point of a sandbox, don’t you think?
I’m not unsympathetic to Flatpak developers, though. The status quo on Linux for decades has been, “you get access to everything.” If Flatpak enforced that sandbox, more than half of the apps on Flathub right now just wouldn’t work because they don’t support the filesystem portal.
I think GNOME and KDE need to do the work of manually restricting Flatpak apps’ access to sensitive permissions like home by default, maybe in a few years when the idea of the filesystem portal has had time to gestate among developers. Kind of like how Firefox’s HTTPS-only mode (which I think should be the default) prevents you from accessing the website unless you give permission.
That’s something we can work on, I think. At least we have a way to get there.
KDE Plasma now includes a GUI settings page that allows to change these.
I think GNOME needs to integrate that into their settings, I mean just include damn Flatseal as a settings page…
I recall saying the exact same thing. They have a built-in area for it in the Apps section. They’ll probably get around to it eventually…
There are packagers maintaining a shitload of apps at once.
Felix Yan is awesome to be maintaining thousands of packages for Arch. But man, that’s a lot of work. If we could reduce the workload of our package maintainers who rarely receive any gratitude (usually only demands) and let them focus on the really important packages, I think that would also be awesome.
It matters as the security rating is based on that, apps like KDE Systemsettings or Flatseal show that etc.
I agree that asking for permissions is better.
Placing an override in ~/.local/share/flatpak/overrides/global would be an easy workaround.
Desktops could implement dialogs that use the currently preset permissions.
Having a sandbox that is optional for the developer rather goes against the point of a sandbox, don’t you think?
No, these are defined, enumerated holes in a sandbox. Without a sandbox you need to monitor the behaviour yourself or other things.
This is the only good working GUI sandbox I know.
half of the apps on Flathub right now just wouldn’t work because they don’t support the filesystem portal.
Important point here:
the portal should allow static permissions too
apps that dont support portals would also not support asking for permissions, natively. A workaround could be done, using dbus, and asking for everything when the app is launched first time, BUT
Linux has a tiny marketshare
flatpaks are not the only ones
people dont care about security that much (look at my survey, I will post an evaluation soon)
permissions on Linux are more complex than on the actively restricted Android. External media, devices, filesystems etc
HTTPS-only mode (which I think should be the default)
I should open a bug about this. It cant be that this is not default, it works well and I agree on the style of implementation.
But this would also need apps to have that mechanism. A Libreoffice will just say “file doesnt exist” currently.
let them focus on the really important packages
Thats why I like Fedora Atomic. The core is as small as possible, the apps are just base stuff or upstream stuff like the Desktop. Everything else is a Flatpak.
It is so much more secure.
RHEL / CentOS has different repos for core and extras. More distros will do that
It matters as the security rating is based on that, apps like KDE Systemsettings or Flatseal show that etc.
That’s a good point.
Linux has a tiny marketshare
people dont care about security that much
permissions on Linux are more complex than on the actively restricted Android. External media, devices, filesystems etc
That’s true.
I think my issue with the Flatpak sandbox is I understand how it works and what its limitations are (and I’m mostly fine with them), but the average user doesn’t. I was reluctant to try Flatpak before understanding how it worked, but now that I know how it works, I think it’s fantastic! But it’s also a work-in-progress. What we have now is good, but I think it could be better. Not entirely sure how it gets better though.
Thats why I like Fedora Atomic. The core is as small as possible, the apps are just base stuff or upstream stuff like the Desktop. Everything else is a Flatpak.
I’m still not really sure where I stand on Fedora Atomic. Lack of H.264 decoding by default is a damaging choice. They should just include openH264 in the base image, reproducibility be damned. Give it 5 more years and maybe this will be revisited…
Nova + Zink + NVK will solve some of the problem with NVIDIA (maybe even very soon), but not hardware decoding currently, which is a big one.
Gamescope doesn’t work great in a Toolbox. It works fine in Flatpak, but Bottles doesn’t let me use Gamescope options. I think Lutris does, but I haven’t tried it out yet.
And how am I supposed to install fonts without layering them on?? I’ve been copying them to ~/.local/share/fonts manually.
I think the idea is cool. But I think a few more parts of the ecosystem need to be in place first. I’ll keep using it for now.
I had a damn Librewolf crash some time ago, the RPM is broken, switched back to Firefox… so I lost about 3 hours of overhaul of that list as it is currently very messy.
But if it is fixed, feel free to submit apps to be included, to have a “goodness enumerating” list of apps, rather than a huge mess of random apps.
Lack of H.264 decoding by default
They dont include that? I thought they would…
I use Fedora kinoite-main from uBlue which is very close to upstream but fixes many issues for me.
UBlue focussing on their very opinionated variants is a bit annoying, because it is now pretty hard to find a guide how to install kinoite-main. I just have a bookmark of their archived website.
Give it 5 more years
If this is actually an issue I would like to tackle that. I am currently doing a Change Proposal to make the default rpm-ostree permissions reasonably secure.
So this is an issue with reproducability? I dont think so? Cisco builds the binaries for Fedora and it gets installed. The packages are not from their repos, but the typical sync issues would not occur on Atomic.
but not hardware decoding currently, which is a big one
Yeah for sure, I think for Intel and AMD too, hardware h264 for example. AV1 in OBS will be awesome though.
But thats why I use uBlues base images, it is Fedora and I say I use Fedora and participate in their community, but their base images have a ton of stuff I dont agree with (toolbox, missing random packages, too simplistic installer…)
I’m very familiar with you, haha. You keep popping up wherever I go these days. You’re everywhere. Maybe not quite as omnipresent as Neal Gompa.
I can think of a few Flatpaks that could fit on that list.
They dont include that? I thought they would…
It’s the same old story with codecs. Fedora would love to support as many codecs as possible, but H.264 is patent-encumbered so they can’t. They had hardware decoding support through Mesa a few years ago but then they…changed it.
Fedora Atomic wants to include the OpenH264 enablement package for Firefox inside the Fedora Flatpak eventually which will solve most of the problem as that is where people are playing H.264 most often.
So this is an issue with reproducability? I dont think so? Cisco builds the binaries for Fedora and it gets installed. The packages are not from their repos, but the typical sync issues would not occur on Atomic.
My understanding is OpenH264 is provided in binary-only format to Fedora because otherwise the royalty-free license cannot apply (i.e. Fedora can’t build it from source). Fedora only ships free software. OpenH264 is free software. But it’s binary-only. So they need to trust Cisco has built the binary correctly. I assume the reason they don’t include it by default is because the only way to trust it’s built from the same sources is to reproduce the build. Otherwise, I really don’t see the issue.
OpenH264 is not a part of the base system so you need to layer it on. OpenH264 doesn’t have support for High 10 Profile video which is fairly common off the web and is generally inferior to x264, I’ve found, but at least it’s something.
And the reason I mention “5 years” is because by then, most of the patents on H.264 will have expired. With the exception of the new ones from just a few years ago that no one really uses. Maybe Fedora can enable x264 in their ffmpeg build then and we can stop talking about it. I am so sick of talking about H.264.
I use Fedora kinoite-main from uBlue which is very close to upstream but fixes many issues for me.
Call it a personal challenge or whatever but I’m sticking to Fedora Silverblue for the foreseeable future. uBlue is almost certainly a better experience for most people.
Yeah for sure, I think for Intel and AMD too, hardware h264 for example.
That’s not true if you’re using Flathub packages. Flathub ships userspace Mesa drivers which enable hardware decoding for Intel and AMD GPUs even with H.264 and H.265.
but their base images have a ton of stuff I dont agree with (toolbox, missing random packages, too simplistic installer…)
uBlue does solve the two big issues with Fedora, which is codecs and proprietary NVIDIA drivers. Any other issues are tiny in comparison. I will say I prefer Toolbox to Distrobox, despite using Distrobox first. I certainly understand that’s an unpopular opinion and not one a lot of people share. It’s probably the same reason you use KDE and I use GNOME (most of the time).
I’ve always hated the Fedora installer. Does uBlue do something different?
Funny, I use that name not so long. Currently hyperfocused on Fedora Discuss, Lemmy and Github.
Although I should really change my stuff to some Forgejo instance and just mirror to Github.
I thought a lot about tech resiliance in the last days, I am from germany and the people here are stupid. They literally elect people that will make a neofascist surveillance hell reality.
I wonder how Tor, Tails and others handle their code stuff. Apart from selfhosting their services of course. Like resiliance, I think decentralized code repos are crucial.
I really like how uBlue just used the official Fedora OCI images (that they produce but dont even use) and used all the container tooling to create this awesome project.
But relying on Github is insane, it is owned by Microsoft and they dont give a damn about freedom. It is pretty scary, 90% of my Android apps are also on Github.
I want to build my own variant, KDE and minimal only, maybe GNOME if contributors join. But no more, all the freedom is great but it is huge maintenance.
H.264 is patent-encumbered so they can’t
I thought Ciscos trick could fix that? They are a huge company, pay the max amount of money already and can just share the software with their license to anyone.
inside the Fedora Flatpak
Not sure if that is the best way. Flatpak has runtime extensions, and rpmfusion could build one for the entire ffmpeg and more. This could just be added from an external repo and installed along.
Or they include openh264 in their runtime.
Fedora Flatpaks got quite a boost recently and even have some KDE apps not on Flathub.
the only way to trust it’s built from the same sources is to reproduce the build.
Well… rpmfusion could do that? And act like a “3rd party auditor” ?
doesn’t have support for High 10 Profile video which is fairly common off the web
Interestesting, never heard that. I use Celluloid Flatpak which is pretty great (I wish Haruna would get their basics together like customizable UI, working subtitles, working queue etc).
So the only reason to have ffmpeg is nice terminal stuff, Dolphin extensions or just video previews in Dolphin. Nautilus supports that via a Flatpak right? Thats cool.
we can stop talking about it. I am so sick of talking about H.264.
Fuck patents. I am happy that we now have AV1 and dont really know why VP9 is not more used? It is a pain!
Call it a personal challenge or whatever
I have a command text file with the exact command I need to reproduce my install. One for Fedora Kinoite, one for Kinoite-main.
It is just a few packages and I really only need the things I mentioned.
I also dont like Aurora or others that much, they have too much stuff added.
That’s not true if you’re using Flathub packages.
True, Flatpak is cool. Dolphin is also available as one, I need to test if it works with Flatpak ark and all that, udisks2, mounting stuff, MTP, maybe SMB.
prefer Toolbox to Distrobox
Interesting, why? I need to try it again.
Do you know btw how to upgrade a F39 distrobox to F40? Distrobox has some “assemble” function to rebuild it with a config file. But traditional dnf system-upgrade doesnt work.
It’s probably the same reason you use KDE and I use GNOME (most of the time).
Why? Curious.
No uBlue uses Anaconda too, which is a whole set of stuff. They are testing the new UI (a component of Anaconda) for workstation exclusively.
uBlue pioneered in making Anaconda work for installing OCI rpm-ostree btw
I like flatpak as it helps me keep bloat down. I always find that native packages eventually pollute the system. Flatpaks do somewhat as well but I can manually delete the app storage if necessary
Pro apt:
Contra apt:
Pro Flatpak
Contra Flatpak
In general I agree, though had something to add regarding these points:
This is a rather major problem with Flatpak; the maintainer decides what permissions they need by default, not the user. The user needs to retroactively roll them back or specify global options and manually override them per-app, but that’s not user-friendly at all. Though many Flatpaks do have good permissions because Flathub maintainers step in and offer suggestions before approving the Flatpak for publication, there are a number of Flatpaks that punch big holes in the sandbox; so much so that they might as well be unsandboxed.
But Bottles has a great sandbox, for instance, which is just what you’d want when running lots of proprietary Windows applications you maybe don’t trust as much as your Linux-y software.
It’s better than what we have with traditional packages but it can sometimes get in the way and not all beginners can easily figure out how to fix permissions issues with Flatseal. This will probably improve as we get more portals built.
Not much is different for distribution-maintained packages, either. See TheEvilSkeleton’s post about how there are over 1200 unmaintained packages in the Debian repositories, and even over 400 in Arch’s much smaller repositories that are outdated (!). At least Flathub applications are usually maintained by upstream, and so are usually as up to date as they can be.
This isn’t really true. It’s only true when terminal applications need privileged access to something. Flathub ships Mesa userpace drivers and NVIDIA’s proprietary userspace drivers just fine. You can package something like
yt-dlp
in Flatpak just fine with--filesystem=host
. Hell, they’ve even got Neovim on Flathub. Sure, it’s a little more cumbersome to type, but you can always create an alias.Flatpak is not suitable for all graphical applications, either. Wireshark’s full feature-set cannot be supported, for example.
I would add that:
flatpak update --commit
. Much harder with traditional package systems, and you’ll probably need to downgrade shared libraries too.master
or with a few patches, all you really need to do is clone it fromflathub/whatever
, change a few lines, and it has a very high chance of building properly. No need to figure out dependencies, toolchains, or sane build options. And it’s all controlled from an easy-to-read and modify file.The default is completely sandboxed. Developers need to allowlist exactly what they want. So it is transparent.
Compare that to a random app where you need to monitor its syscalls to see what it does.
KDE Plasma now includes a GUI settings page that allows to change these.
I think GNOME needs to integrate that into their settings, I mean just include damn Flatseal as a settings page…
This is supercool and I started doing that. All apps get the env vars to force Wayland now even though they may not use it. I have my overrides and uploaded them to my dotfiles.
Echo that
This is crazy, same on Fedora. Distros really need to start using separate repos, and automatically filter out everything that didnt get a “I maintain this” for a while.
There are packagers maintaining a shitload of apps at once.
Not always but having this at all, and having most big names in there, is incredible. This is like a first time this happens.
Ostree is great
And having it declared centrally can help add all the security benefits of the individual ones too. Really nice
The default before the developer touches it doesn’t matter; compare this to Android, iOS, or macOS’s permission system. An app needs to ask for permission to use the microphone or access your files. With Flatpak, all a developer needs to do is specify
--filesystem=home
or--socket=pulseaudio
and if the user hasn’t specified global options like--nofilesystem=home
, then the developer gets access to it. Having a sandbox that is optional for the developer rather goes against the point of a sandbox, don’t you think?I’m not unsympathetic to Flatpak developers, though. The status quo on Linux for decades has been, “you get access to everything.” If Flatpak enforced that sandbox, more than half of the apps on Flathub right now just wouldn’t work because they don’t support the filesystem portal.
I think GNOME and KDE need to do the work of manually restricting Flatpak apps’ access to sensitive permissions like
home
by default, maybe in a few years when the idea of the filesystem portal has had time to gestate among developers. Kind of like how Firefox’s HTTPS-only mode (which I think should be the default) prevents you from accessing the website unless you give permission.That’s something we can work on, I think. At least we have a way to get there.
I recall saying the exact same thing. They have a built-in area for it in the Apps section. They’ll probably get around to it eventually…
It’s pretty crazy. I think this is probably the craziest example: https://old.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/f3wrez/much_love_to_felix_yan_an_arch_maintainer_from/
Felix Yan is awesome to be maintaining thousands of packages for Arch. But man, that’s a lot of work. If we could reduce the workload of our package maintainers who rarely receive any gratitude (usually only demands) and let them focus on the really important packages, I think that would also be awesome.
Yay my answer was deleted…
It matters as the security rating is based on that, apps like KDE Systemsettings or Flatseal show that etc.
I agree that asking for permissions is better.
Placing an override in
~/.local/share/flatpak/overrides/global
would be an easy workaround.Desktops could implement dialogs that use the currently preset permissions.
No, these are defined, enumerated holes in a sandbox. Without a sandbox you need to monitor the behaviour yourself or other things.
This is the only good working GUI sandbox I know.
Important point here:
I should open a bug about this. It cant be that this is not default, it works well and I agree on the style of implementation.
But this would also need apps to have that mechanism. A Libreoffice will just say “file doesnt exist” currently.
Thats why I like Fedora Atomic. The core is as small as possible, the apps are just base stuff or upstream stuff like the Desktop. Everything else is a Flatpak.
It is so much more secure.
RHEL / CentOS has different repos for core and extras. More distros will do that
That’s a good point.
That’s true.
I think my issue with the Flatpak sandbox is I understand how it works and what its limitations are (and I’m mostly fine with them), but the average user doesn’t. I was reluctant to try Flatpak before understanding how it worked, but now that I know how it works, I think it’s fantastic! But it’s also a work-in-progress. What we have now is good, but I think it could be better. Not entirely sure how it gets better though.
I’m still not really sure where I stand on Fedora Atomic. Lack of H.264 decoding by default is a damaging choice. They should just include openH264 in the base image, reproducibility be damned. Give it 5 more years and maybe this will be revisited…
Nova + Zink + NVK will solve some of the problem with NVIDIA (maybe even very soon), but not hardware decoding currently, which is a big one.
Gamescope doesn’t work great in a Toolbox. It works fine in Flatpak, but Bottles doesn’t let me use Gamescope options. I think Lutris does, but I haven’t tried it out yet.
And how am I supposed to install fonts without layering them on?? I’ve been copying them to
~/.local/share/fonts
manually.I think the idea is cool. But I think a few more parts of the ecosystem need to be in place first. I’ll keep using it for now.
I maintain a list of recommended Flatpak apps.
I had a damn Librewolf crash some time ago, the RPM is broken, switched back to Firefox… so I lost about 3 hours of overhaul of that list as it is currently very messy.
But if it is fixed, feel free to submit apps to be included, to have a “goodness enumerating” list of apps, rather than a huge mess of random apps.
They dont include that? I thought they would…
I use Fedora kinoite-main from uBlue which is very close to upstream but fixes many issues for me.
UBlue focussing on their very opinionated variants is a bit annoying, because it is now pretty hard to find a guide how to install kinoite-main. I just have a bookmark of their archived website.
If this is actually an issue I would like to tackle that. I am currently doing a Change Proposal to make the default rpm-ostree permissions reasonably secure.
So this is an issue with reproducability? I dont think so? Cisco builds the binaries for Fedora and it gets installed. The packages are not from their repos, but the typical sync issues would not occur on Atomic.
Yeah for sure, I think for Intel and AMD too, hardware h264 for example. AV1 in OBS will be awesome though.
But thats why I use uBlues base images, it is Fedora and I say I use Fedora and participate in their community, but their base images have a ton of stuff I dont agree with (toolbox, missing random packages, too simplistic installer…)
I’m very familiar with you, haha. You keep popping up wherever I go these days. You’re everywhere. Maybe not quite as omnipresent as Neal Gompa.
I can think of a few Flatpaks that could fit on that list.
It’s the same old story with codecs. Fedora would love to support as many codecs as possible, but H.264 is patent-encumbered so they can’t. They had hardware decoding support through Mesa a few years ago but then they…changed it.
Fedora Atomic wants to include the OpenH264 enablement package for Firefox inside the Fedora Flatpak eventually which will solve most of the problem as that is where people are playing H.264 most often.
My understanding is OpenH264 is provided in binary-only format to Fedora because otherwise the royalty-free license cannot apply (i.e. Fedora can’t build it from source). Fedora only ships free software. OpenH264 is free software. But it’s binary-only. So they need to trust Cisco has built the binary correctly. I assume the reason they don’t include it by default is because the only way to trust it’s built from the same sources is to reproduce the build. Otherwise, I really don’t see the issue.
OpenH264 is not a part of the base system so you need to layer it on. OpenH264 doesn’t have support for High 10 Profile video which is fairly common off the web and is generally inferior to x264, I’ve found, but at least it’s something.
And the reason I mention “5 years” is because by then, most of the patents on H.264 will have expired. With the exception of the new ones from just a few years ago that no one really uses. Maybe Fedora can enable x264 in their ffmpeg build then and we can stop talking about it. I am so sick of talking about H.264.
Call it a personal challenge or whatever but I’m sticking to Fedora Silverblue for the foreseeable future. uBlue is almost certainly a better experience for most people.
That’s not true if you’re using Flathub packages. Flathub ships userspace Mesa drivers which enable hardware decoding for Intel and AMD GPUs even with H.264 and H.265.
uBlue does solve the two big issues with Fedora, which is codecs and proprietary NVIDIA drivers. Any other issues are tiny in comparison. I will say I prefer Toolbox to Distrobox, despite using Distrobox first. I certainly understand that’s an unpopular opinion and not one a lot of people share. It’s probably the same reason you use KDE and I use GNOME (most of the time).
I’ve always hated the Fedora installer. Does uBlue do something different?
Funny, I use that name not so long. Currently hyperfocused on Fedora Discuss, Lemmy and Github.
Although I should really change my stuff to some Forgejo instance and just mirror to Github.
I thought a lot about tech resiliance in the last days, I am from germany and the people here are stupid. They literally elect people that will make a neofascist surveillance hell reality.
I wonder how Tor, Tails and others handle their code stuff. Apart from selfhosting their services of course. Like resiliance, I think decentralized code repos are crucial.
I really like how uBlue just used the official Fedora OCI images (that they produce but dont even use) and used all the container tooling to create this awesome project.
But relying on Github is insane, it is owned by Microsoft and they dont give a damn about freedom. It is pretty scary, 90% of my Android apps are also on Github.
I want to build my own variant, KDE and minimal only, maybe GNOME if contributors join. But no more, all the freedom is great but it is huge maintenance.
I thought Ciscos trick could fix that? They are a huge company, pay the max amount of money already and can just share the software with their license to anyone.
Not sure if that is the best way. Flatpak has runtime extensions, and rpmfusion could build one for the entire ffmpeg and more. This could just be added from an external repo and installed along.
Or they include openh264 in their runtime.
Fedora Flatpaks got quite a boost recently and even have some KDE apps not on Flathub.
Well… rpmfusion could do that? And act like a “3rd party auditor” ?
Interestesting, never heard that. I use Celluloid Flatpak which is pretty great (I wish Haruna would get their basics together like customizable UI, working subtitles, working queue etc).
So the only reason to have ffmpeg is nice terminal stuff, Dolphin extensions or just video previews in Dolphin. Nautilus supports that via a Flatpak right? Thats cool.
Fuck patents. I am happy that we now have AV1 and dont really know why VP9 is not more used? It is a pain!
I have a command text file with the exact command I need to reproduce my install. One for Fedora Kinoite, one for Kinoite-main.
It is just a few packages and I really only need the things I mentioned.
I also dont like Aurora or others that much, they have too much stuff added.
True, Flatpak is cool. Dolphin is also available as one, I need to test if it works with Flatpak ark and all that, udisks2, mounting stuff, MTP, maybe SMB.
Interesting, why? I need to try it again.
Do you know btw how to upgrade a F39 distrobox to F40? Distrobox has some “assemble” function to rebuild it with a config file. But traditional dnf system-upgrade doesnt work.
Why? Curious.
No uBlue uses Anaconda too, which is a whole set of stuff. They are testing the new UI (a component of Anaconda) for workstation exclusively.
uBlue pioneered in making Anaconda work for installing OCI rpm-ostree btw
I like flatpak as it helps me keep bloat down. I always find that native packages eventually pollute the system. Flatpaks do somewhat as well but I can manually delete the app storage if necessary
Impossible. Like flatpak itself with 5 applications was using more storage than my entire distro with the same apps as appimages on top.