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What is the point of Flatpak, AppImage, Snap, etc?
(beehaw.org)
If it's free and open source and it's also software, it can be discussed here. Subcommunity of Technology.
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I thought if one app needs one version of a library and another app another, you'll have a problem with normal package managers, sandboxing gets around this (and also has some security benefits?) ?
Also sure maybe I want to wait two years for my distros' maintainers to check and ship a Thunderbird update. But maybe I don't (and also don't want to use Arch), Flatpaks are a (potentially unsafe?) way for me to get updated software faster.
Linux libraries do have versioning. So the system can sort that out... maybe. You also do not want the same app indirectly loading multiple versions of the same library. You do kind of want to have all apps on your system linking to the same shared image though. If it does the system needs to only have one in memory even if multiple running apps are using it. This is a big space and load time savings. These separate binary formats though handy have their issues.