bread
appimagepool
bread | appimagepool | |
---|---|---|
6 | 16 | |
281 | 601 | |
- | - | |
5.4 | 5.7 | |
6 months ago | 24 days ago | |
C | Dart | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
bread
- BREAD: Bios Reverse Engineering and Advanced Debugging
- BREAD: BIOS Reverse Engineering & Advanced Debugging
- Bread: Bios Reverse Engineering and Advanced Debugging
- BREAD: BIOS Reverse Engineering & Advanced Debugging - an 'injectable' real-mode x86 debugger that can debug arbitrary real-mode code (on real HW) from another PC via serial cable.
appimagepool
- Appimagepool: A simple, modern AppImageHub Client, powered by flutter
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What’s the best way to install App Man, direct or via distrobox?
I think it's safe to install it directly as it stores everything in a single directory. For AppImages there is also AppImagePool + AppImageLauncher (can be installed rootless, useful for better integration of appimages).
- Working on an app to "install" and manage AppImages
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Why do a lot of people advocate for appimages while hating the idea of downloading random applications off the internet?
It's called AppImage Pool available at GitHub and in the Flathub. It also had a video done on it by TechHut.
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"AM" and AppMan - that's why they don't include support for AppImageHub and similar sites
The preferred sources for downloading packages in AppImage format via "AM" / AppMan are GitHub and Sourceforge, however, writing installation scripts that are compatible with one or more programs is a difficult task. Just think that many developers add multiple versions of the same product in the same tag (I have to include also commands to find the exact name of the latest version to avoid the download of other packages), or include more complex links that require an equally complex function to obtain the latest version of a program, and this slows down the loading of these programs on the "AM" repository I manage. I have therefore included excellent AppImage package managers such as "Bread" and "Zap" among the downloadable programs, but also "AppimagePool" and "bauh" are available among the graphics applications (not counting a "Pacstall" AppImage versionI made). These tools should compensate the lack of support for certain sources that I have not included in the "AM" repository.
- AppImagePool: Linux App Store for AppImages! (not mine)
- AppImagePool
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Find, Download, and Update AppImages quickly with 'Pool' app (works with Kubuntu)
I downloaded the appimage (seemed appropriate). Then marked it as executable.
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AppImagePool: Simple AppImageHub Client
Github
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Besides game compatibility, what is something that Linux gaming could improve on?
https://github.com/prateekmedia/appimagepool this?
What are some alternatives?
limine - Modern, advanced, portable, multiprotocol bootloader.
zap - :zap: Delightful AppImage package manager
AMI_BIOS_CodeInjection - A simple tutorial on how to do reverse engineer and code injection on AMI BIOSes (Legacy)
AppImageLauncher - Helper application for Linux distributions serving as a kind of "entry point" for running and integrating AppImages
appimage-cli-tool - AppImage package manager
gearlever - Manage AppImages with ease 📦
nixpkgs - Nix Packages collection & NixOS
libdebugme - Automatically spawn gdb on error.
pacstall - An AUR-inspired package manager for Ubuntu
OverRide - Binary Exploitation and Reverse-Engineering (from assembly into C)
AppMan - Manage 1900+ AppImage packages and official standalone apps for GNU/Linux without root privileges using the extensible and ever-growing AUR-inspired database of "AM Application Manager". Easy to use like APT and powerful like PacMan.