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Snap out of it: Canonical on Flatpak friction, Core Desktop, and the future of Ubuntu
(www.theregister.com)
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This is a pretty frustrating interview to me. He doesn't really seem to engage at all with the fact that building a core system component in a way that isn't fully open completely looses all of the resiliency to enshittification or conflict of interest between corporation and users that makes linux a good thing in the first place.
I don't personally really like that fedora chooses to repackage and serve their own versions of flatpaks. But that its possible is mandatory, because otherwise if flatpaks are successful and they end up making choices that are user hostile, there is no escape hatch.
Its a completely unnecessary choice, and is to me, entirely disqualifying. If snaps were to become successful it would be a bad thing for this ecosystem that I care about.
I also find it frankly bewildering that he talks about everything being their own software stack as a flex, when this whole space is built on collaboration building together, and then goes on to describe it as vertical integration, a form of anticompetitive behavior that countries make laws aimed at preventing. Vertical integration is not a good thing.
Its fine if your stack is all yours, but thinking vertical integration is a flex feels really slimy and out of touch to me