B: The author’s point was that Flatpak solves a lot of pain points for developers on Linux with distribution that Appimage doesn’t, and package managers certainly don’t, and that if there’s going to be companies like Valve and Redhat that are going all-in on that method, it would benefit the Linux ecosystem that’s currently driving away developers in droves with fragmentation to consider that.
Personally I like Appimage for just being able to grab a file and run it, and I integrate Gear Lever updates by building my own repackaging infra to keep projects that use it updating via Gear Lever’s Update All button. But I can completely commiserate with the idea that it isn’t very useful for most users to have to come up with things like that themselves when Flatpak is easily integrated with Discover and other packagekit software updaters.
the Linux ecosystem that’s currently driving away developers in droves with fragmentation to consider that.
I am very skeptical of this. Exactly which developers are being driven away “in droves” because of packaging system differences? If you want to make a case for that assertion, you’re going to have to identify them, so they can be counted.
If it turns out that there are many developers who think like this, someone ought to let them know that they don’t have to package open-source software for every distro out there in order to reach all the major distros. Just package it for one, or even none, and let package maintainers do their thing.
Or, are you talking about proprietary software? That would be a different discussion.
You would figure that most developers would just work on the platform that gives them the tools to do what they do most easily. Yet the amount that won’t use Linux and instead seemingly cripple themselves by developing on Mac or Windows frankly astounds me. But I’m also very used to Linux’ pain points, having used it since the 90s. If I only every got my software with an .exe or .dmg download, I’d probably shy away as well.
I couldn’t imagine working with Docker Desktop or WSL, or depending on Brew to have everything I need, but that’s the reality for many, because it’s familiar and simple. The underlying operating system is abstracted away so they don’t have to deal with it, and sticking their nose in Linux is scary and confusing, especially if you’re expected to deal with the panoply of installation methods available to your software. When I dealt with Windows in the long-long ago, you built a MSinstaller package and went on your merry way.
And if you look at new developers today, do you think they’d put up with RBBS for a minute if that’s how they got their software out?
I don’t really get the point of the blog, honestly, because in the first part they are railing against one angle, then reverse and argue FOR it in a sense by saying Flatpak just works. Of course it does. That’s it’s job.
AppImage also just works, but there is a fundamental difference in the delta of what you get as a payload. AppImage has EVERYTHING the image needs to run. Flatpaks only contain the running code and custom dependencies, then it’s manager solves for shared libraries and generics from commonly available layers to download and run to solve for those deps.
Both make sense depending on how you feel you need to tackle the problem.
Where the author kid of goes off the rails is complaining that somehow either camp is somehow responsible for their product being popular enough to survive and be taken up by Valve. In this specific case, Valve is intending to include simple packaging for games and libraries they intend to ship to millions of cross platform devices. Flatpak makes sense from a bandwidth and storage standpoint for end-users.
AppImage does not. No idea why this person is taking issue with that.
I think their point, in the first part at least before going off on ideology, is that appimage makes things a lot harder for developers. At least I think that’s their point, the rantiness makes it hard to distinguish technical points from the idealogical…
A: It’s not my blog
B: The author’s point was that Flatpak solves a lot of pain points for developers on Linux with distribution that Appimage doesn’t, and package managers certainly don’t, and that if there’s going to be companies like Valve and Redhat that are going all-in on that method, it would benefit the Linux ecosystem that’s currently driving away developers in droves with fragmentation to consider that.
Personally I like Appimage for just being able to grab a file and run it, and I integrate Gear Lever updates by building my own repackaging infra to keep projects that use it updating via Gear Lever’s Update All button. But I can completely commiserate with the idea that it isn’t very useful for most users to have to come up with things like that themselves when Flatpak is easily integrated with Discover and other packagekit software updaters.
I am very skeptical of this. Exactly which developers are being driven away “in droves” because of packaging system differences? If you want to make a case for that assertion, you’re going to have to identify them, so they can be counted.
If it turns out that there are many developers who think like this, someone ought to let them know that they don’t have to package open-source software for every distro out there in order to reach all the major distros. Just package it for one, or even none, and let package maintainers do their thing.
Or, are you talking about proprietary software? That would be a different discussion.
Even if maintainers wouldn’t just package stuff themselves. How many formats do you need to cover 95% of the eco system? More than 3?
As an old GenX who grew up with BBSs, Fidonet and dialup shell accounts so I’m probably missing something…
Where are the Linux developers being driven in droves to exactly?
We’ve always had nix fragmentation, that’s the nature of FOSS.
Teach this old gramps what he doesn’t understand.
You would figure that most developers would just work on the platform that gives them the tools to do what they do most easily. Yet the amount that won’t use Linux and instead seemingly cripple themselves by developing on Mac or Windows frankly astounds me. But I’m also very used to Linux’ pain points, having used it since the 90s. If I only every got my software with an .exe or .dmg download, I’d probably shy away as well.
I couldn’t imagine working with Docker Desktop or WSL, or depending on Brew to have everything I need, but that’s the reality for many, because it’s familiar and simple. The underlying operating system is abstracted away so they don’t have to deal with it, and sticking their nose in Linux is scary and confusing, especially if you’re expected to deal with the panoply of installation methods available to your software. When I dealt with Windows in the long-long ago, you built a MSinstaller package and went on your merry way.
And if you look at new developers today, do you think they’d put up with RBBS for a minute if that’s how they got their software out?
In my experience fragmentation of Linux is not at all why people
I don’t really get the point of the blog, honestly, because in the first part they are railing against one angle, then reverse and argue FOR it in a sense by saying Flatpak just works. Of course it does. That’s it’s job.
AppImage also just works, but there is a fundamental difference in the delta of what you get as a payload. AppImage has EVERYTHING the image needs to run. Flatpaks only contain the running code and custom dependencies, then it’s manager solves for shared libraries and generics from commonly available layers to download and run to solve for those deps.
Both make sense depending on how you feel you need to tackle the problem.
Where the author kid of goes off the rails is complaining that somehow either camp is somehow responsible for their product being popular enough to survive and be taken up by Valve. In this specific case, Valve is intending to include simple packaging for games and libraries they intend to ship to millions of cross platform devices. Flatpak makes sense from a bandwidth and storage standpoint for end-users.
AppImage does not. No idea why this person is taking issue with that.
I think their point, in the first part at least before going off on ideology, is that appimage makes things a lot harder for developers. At least I think that’s their point, the rantiness makes it hard to distinguish technical points from the idealogical…