Posted February 04, 2018
shmerl
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shmerl Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Sep 2011
From United States
Magmarock
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Magmarock Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Jul 2011
From Australia
Posted February 04, 2018
shmerl: Same here. I'm not sure why classic bundling can't solve these problems if developers would put some effort into doing it properly.
Developers aren't going to put effort into their until you start putting effort into your platform. shmerl: Lock-in and requirements driven by abusing monopolistic power is not "just business", it's a crooked practice.
As I said it my prior statement. DX12 is optional. Also monopolies don't just happen they happen when there's no competition. Oh decent competition. Another reason you might end up with a monopoly is because you're closest competitor is more excuses the innovation hint hint ;-9 Also I'm looking at you AMD.
Post edited February 04, 2018 by Magmarock
shmerl
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shmerl Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Sep 2011
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ssokolow
Linux Geek
ssokolow Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Feb 2011
From Canada
Posted February 04, 2018
shmerl: Developers already do. We are talking about those who say that they need flatpak. Others make bundled releases just fine.
I have two main reasons to want Flatpak: 1. To finally get all of my applications using the same Open/Save dialogs.
2. To make it impossible for badly-behaved games like The Escapists to doodle all over $HOME and $HOME/Documents with their non-hidden folders by locking them into sandboxes which don't allow access to those locations.
Post edited February 04, 2018 by ssokolow
shmerl
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shmerl Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Sep 2011
From United States
Posted February 04, 2018
Regarding sandboxing. I don't think this should be always coming from developers' side necessarily. I.e. there can be some tools that would take a normal bundled tarball and provide an easy way to sandbox it after you downloaded the game.
Post edited February 04, 2018 by shmerl
adamhm
GOG for Linux
adamhm Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: May 2009
From United Kingdom
Posted February 04, 2018
Magmarock: Out of the Linux repos APT is my preferred though I still prefer the Windows exe system more.
These are not comparable. APT is a package distribution system... what you're saying here is like comparing apples to the apple cart. A big factor is developer experience. Software done right on Linux will keep working with minimal tweaking required as time goes on regardless of whether it's closed or open source, while software that's done poorly will likely break sooner rather than later. The same is true of Windows, but there's just a hell of a lot more experience and knowledge about which practices are good & which are bad on Windows than there is for Linux, at least when it comes to games.
Magmarock: As I said it my prior statement. DX12 is optional. Also monopolies don't just happen they happen when there's no competition. Oh decent competition. Another reason you might end up with a monopoly is because you're closest competitor is more excuses the innovation hint hint ;-9
Microsoft did quite a lot to stamp out (or buy out) competitors before they could become a threat to their position. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_Microsoft
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=osSMJRyxG0k
Magmarock
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Magmarock Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Jul 2011
From Australia
Posted February 05, 2018
adamhm: These are not comparable. APT is a package distribution system... what you're saying here is like comparing apples to the apple cart.
Methods of installing software is what I meant. Package managers and distributions are just a cluster fuck it’s hard to keep track of everything adamhm: A big factor is developer experience. Software done right on Linux will keep working with minimal tweaking required as time goes on regardless of whether it's closed or open source, while software that's done poorly will likely break sooner rather than later. The same is true of Windows, but there's just a hell of a lot more experience and knowledge about which practices are good & which are bad on Windows than there is for Linux, at least when it comes to games.
That’s a very good point and might very well be true. But how you do hone skill and experience with an OS that keeps changing the rules? adamhm: Microsoft did quite a lot to stamp out (or buy out) competitors before they could become a threat to their position.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_Microsoft
Why re you making me defend Microsoft I really don’t want to. Buying out competition is hardly a crime and I would look to the sellers more then the buyers if you’re unhappy with it. Microsoft not too long ago bought out Canonical one of the biggest players in the Linux desktop scene. All I can say to that is. That’s what happens when your fan base doesn’t financially support you. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_Microsoft
Also Linux can’t just keep blaming Microsoft for their lack of public interest. Manopolies have been beaten all the time by bigger success in the industry. Sony beat Nintendo then Microsoft beat Sony, again and now Nintendo looks to be back on top. Make something good and people will get it.
Yeah I’ve seen videos from him before. AMD fans and Linux fans have a lot in common. Always blaming the competition instead of taking responsibly. I don’t want to get into a AMD vs everyone but suffice to say. The day that AMD make something good is the day I’ll use it. I put myself first as a customer not a brand. They’re here to serve me not the other way around.
immi101
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immi101 Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: May 2010
From Germany
Posted February 05, 2018
ssokolow: I have two main reasons to want Flatpak:
1. To finally get all of my applications using the same Open/Save dialogs.
that's cute ;) 1. To finally get all of my applications using the same Open/Save dialogs.
reminds me of all the good old gtk/gnome <=> qt/kde fighting, where each side would desperately try to run only applications using their toolkit, so that nothing would dare to endanger the uniform look of the desktop :D
(flatpak seems a total overkill as solution for this)
ssokolow: 2. To make it impossible for badly-behaved games like The Escapists to doodle all over $HOME and $HOME/Documents with their non-hidden folders by locking them into sandboxes which don't allow access to those locations.
ever tried firejail ? firejail --private=/home/xxx/.local/share/escapist application
(or something like that)
will launch the application in a container and mount /home/xxx/.local/share/escapist as /home/xxx
or
firejail --overlay-named=escapist application
will mount a filesystem overlay (overlayFS) on top of the filesystem. All filesystem modifications go into the overlay, which is stored under $HOME/.firejail/<NAME>
ssokolow
Linux Geek
ssokolow Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Feb 2011
From Canada
Posted February 05, 2018
ssokolow: I have two main reasons to want Flatpak:
1. To finally get all of my applications using the same Open/Save dialogs.
immi101: that's cute ;) 1. To finally get all of my applications using the same Open/Save dialogs.
reminds me of all the good old gtk/gnome <=> qt/kde fighting, where each side would desperately try to run only applications using their toolkit, so that nothing would dare to endanger the uniform look of the desktop :D
(flatpak seems a total overkill as solution for this)
As for it being an overkill solution, it's MUCH more stable than the infamously crashy old LD_PRELOAD hack named KGtk (not to mention that KDE's dialogs see all KGtk-monkeypatched apps as the same for application-specific bookmarking purposes) and I might as well use Flatpak if I was planning on combining it with Firejail anyway.
ssokolow: 2. To make it impossible for badly-behaved games like The Escapists to doodle all over $HOME and $HOME/Documents with their non-hidden folders by locking them into sandboxes which don't allow access to those locations.
immi101: ever tried firejail ? firejail --private=/home/xxx/.local/share/escapist application
(or something like that)
will launch the application in a container and mount /home/xxx/.local/share/escapist as /home/xxx
or
firejail --overlay-named=escapist application
will mount a filesystem overlay (overlayFS) on top of the filesystem. All filesystem modifications go into the overlay, which is stored under $HOME/.firejail/<NAME>
immi101
User
immi101 Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: May 2010
From Germany
Posted February 05, 2018
immi101: that's cute ;)
reminds me of all the good old gtk/gnome <=> qt/kde fighting, where each side would desperately try to run only applications using their toolkit, so that nothing would dare to endanger the uniform look of the desktop :D
(flatpak seems a total overkill as solution for this)
ssokolow: Once you're used to having the "application-specific bookmark" feature for KDE's Places sidebar, you really start to miss it in the GTK+ dialogs... not to mention the hassle of manually having to keep the Places bookmarks in sync between the KDE and GTK+ dialogs. reminds me of all the good old gtk/gnome <=> qt/kde fighting, where each side would desperately try to run only applications using their toolkit, so that nothing would dare to endanger the uniform look of the desktop :D
(flatpak seems a total overkill as solution for this)
I can see how that can be useful.
tbh I only ever use two bookmarks: one to $Home and one to my permament storage on a RAID system
I put up with doing a few clicks from there to my specific destination.
adamhm
GOG for Linux
adamhm Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: May 2009
From United Kingdom
Posted February 05, 2018
Magmarock: Methods of installing software is what I meant. Package managers and distributions are just a cluster fuck it’s hard to keep track of everything
Methods of installing software on Windows: - Windows Store
- Executable installer (e.g. GOG installer)
- "unzip and go" archives
And on Linux:
- System repositories
- .deb/.rpm/etc. package
- Executable installer (e.g. GOG installer)
- "unzip and go" archives
I personally find it much easier to keep track of everything on Linux than on Windows. Plus Linux has a more rigid structure for user files so it's less likely that configuration files etc. for one piece of software will be shotgunned across a bunch of different locations making it hard to find everything when making backups.
Magmarock: That’s a very good point and might very well be true. But how you do hone skill and experience with an OS that keeps changing the rules?
But the rules don't keep changing, which is why games ported by e.g. Ryan Gordon, Ethan Lee, and other veteran Linux developers work well and consistently keep working many years ahead, while releases by less experienced developers tend to be a bit more "hit and miss". This situation will improve as time goes on and more developers learn. Magmarock: Why're you making me defend Microsoft I really don’t want to. Buying out competition is hardly a crime and I would look to the sellers more then the buyers if you’re unhappy with it. Microsoft not too long ago bought out Canonical one of the biggest players in the Linux desktop scene. All I can say to that is. That’s what happens when your fan base doesn’t financially support you.
Microsoft did not buy out Canonical; I'm not sure where you pulled that from. Such a thing would have been huge news. Magmarock: Also Linux can’t just keep blaming Microsoft for their lack of public interest. Manopolies have been beaten all the time by bigger success in the industry. Sony beat Nintendo then Microsoft beat Sony, again and now Nintendo looks to be back on top. Make something good and people will get it.
It's not about having a monopoly position but about abusing said position, something which Microsoft is infamous for because it's something they have done repeatedly and been in court over numerous times. It's true though - you can look it all up yourself if you have any doubts.
Magmarock
New User
Magmarock Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Jul 2011
From Australia
Posted February 07, 2018
low rated
adamhm: Methods of installing software on Windows:
- Windows Store
- Executable installer (e.g. GOG installer)
- "unzip and go" archives
And on Linux:
- System repositories
- .deb/.rpm/etc. package
- Executable installer (e.g. GOG installer)
- "unzip and go" archives
I personally find it much easier to keep track of everything on Linux than on Windows. Plus Linux has a more rigid structure for user files so it's less likely that configuration files etc. for one piece of software will be shotgunned across a bunch of different locations making it hard to find everything when making backups.
That’s fair I think I’d have to write a dedicated article to go into further detail on this one. The short and sweet of it is though more Executable installers for Linux. - Windows Store
- Executable installer (e.g. GOG installer)
- "unzip and go" archives
And on Linux:
- System repositories
- .deb/.rpm/etc. package
- Executable installer (e.g. GOG installer)
- "unzip and go" archives
I personally find it much easier to keep track of everything on Linux than on Windows. Plus Linux has a more rigid structure for user files so it's less likely that configuration files etc. for one piece of software will be shotgunned across a bunch of different locations making it hard to find everything when making backups.
adamhm: But the rules don't keep changing, which is why games ported by e.g. Ryan Gordon, Ethan Lee, and other veteran Linux developers work well and consistently keep working many years ahead, while releases by less experienced developers tend to be a bit more "hit and miss". This situation will improve as time goes on and more developers learn.
Every time I use Mint Ubuntu Manjaro, something has always changed and I have to get used to it again. Like writing that script for example. adamhm: Microsoft did not buy out Canonical; I'm not sure where you pulled that from. Such a thing would have been huge news.
Huh? Weird, it looks like they used just integrated some Ubuntu parts in the OS. It must have been this BS https://fossbytes.com/microsoft-buys-canonical-kills-ubuntu-linux-forever/ it’s the first thing that pops up on google. I know, I know, should look at things more closely. adamhm: It's not about having a monopoly position but about abusing said position, something which Microsoft is infamous for because it's something they have done repeatedly and been in court over numerous times.
Any business that obtains a monopoly is going to be doing something like that. Besides I’m criticising Linux not praising Microsoft. When says “Linux has got all these problems that needs addressing” you can’t respond to that with “But Microsoft did this and that” I think this little clip from the Simpsons sums it up perfect.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XQcBI5SKJgU
Sorry mate I just don’t care. Either make something good or lose your business.
shmerl
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shmerl Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Sep 2011
From United States
muntdefems
How appropriate. You fight like a cow.
muntdefems Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Jul 2014
From Poland
shmerl
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shmerl Sorry, data for given user is currently unavailable. Please, try again later. View profile View wishlist Start conversation Invite to friends Invite to friends Accept invitation Accept invitation Pending invitation... Unblock chat Registered: Sep 2011
From United States
Posted April 19, 2018
Post edited April 19, 2018 by shmerl