I haven’t used Ubuntu for a long time, and I’ve already seen the news that Ubuntu won’t prioritize Flatpak. I think Snap is fully integrated with Ubuntu. Why don’t people like it? I recently installed Ubuntu and I wonder what the reason for the dislike is.

  • flux@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    My main reason is that it’s built for a single package repository – basically making it a separate garden.

    I mean you can change the “store”, but let’s say you do: then you cannot install packages from the first repo as you can only have one repository active at a time. And because Canonical’s is the largest, it’s not very feasible to provide an alternative.

    Btw, can you find out how its changed? Last time I checked it wasn’t too easy.

    Contrast this with flatpak where basically anyone can provide packages. There are no walls between repos. It’s the intended use case.

    Indeed to me it seems Canonical is aspiring to become the appstore for Linux with Snap whereas flatpak implements the values of open source community, not monopolistic ones. I don’t know of any technical benefits Snap has over Flatpak; perhaps there are some?


    Though if I have some misconseptions about Snap, I’m happy to be educated :).