XDA Developers on MSN
The Flatpak versus native packages debate finally made sense when I stopped looking for a winner
It doesn’t have to be a winner-take-all debate. Using both changed how I manage Linux apps for the better.
Clement Lefebvre, the head of the Linux Mint project, has updated us on the state of the upcoming 18.3 release. It'll come with support for the Flatpak package system and include Redshift by default.
How-To Geek on MSN
3 modern Linux apps to try this weekend (April 10-12)
Three Linux apps that don't look like they were designed during the 2000s.
There are hundreds of Linux distributions to choose from, and while there are some similarities (they all use some version of the Linux kernel and most support a variety of popular desktop ...
Once upon a time, GNOME and KDE got along like cats and dogs. That was then. This is now. At Linux Application Summit (LAS) in Barcelona, the two, along with other desktop developers, came together to ...
The Flatpak framework for distributing Linux desktop applications is now in prodaction release, after three years of beta status. The framework, originally called XDG-app, is intended to make Linux ...
...smells a lot like the "Klik" package manager a few years back. Not necessarily a bad idea, but with maybe 99% of Linux systems running .deb or .rpm, and tools to allow interoperability, who really ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results