snapcraft.io
com.vscodium.codium | snapcraft.io | |
---|---|---|
10 | 14 | |
89 | 138 | |
- | 2.2% | |
8.7 | 9.3 | |
7 days ago | 10 days ago | |
JavaScript | ||
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
com.vscodium.codium
- First config install
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VScode installed via pop_shop (flatpak) doesn't have access to sudo in the integrated terminal
Flatpak: https://flathub.org/apps/details/com.vscodium.codium
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As Promised - How to make a game on the Steam Deck - Full Tutorial - using Visual Studio Code and Unity
? ?
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what's really important
yeah, that'd be crazy... especially, when there's a flatpak and an appimage if they really didn't want to add the repo..
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Help, i cant install VS Code , tried various things , urgent
I use Vs Codium, works just the same but without all the Microsoft telemetry. You could use the flatpak in the software manager, but I got lazy filter things with FLatseal.
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What is your opinion about text editor for privacy? What do you use?
I wouldn't spend too much time worrying about privacy in open-source editors. From a privacy perspective, being built on Electron isn't different from being programmed in C++ or anything else - they can still spy on you and do network requests. I'm not a fan of vscodium myself, but it sounds fine for your needs. You could run the editor in a sandbox that blocks network traffic. On Linux, this is easily done with the Flatpak and Flatseal.
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SDK extensions not getting detected
I'm following the Vscodium instructions to get more languages in its flatpak (namely, Php). But it seems that flatpak doesn't detect my installed php sdk.
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Red Hat donates $10,000 to OBS Studio, Flatpak to be official for Linux
VSCodium is a very, very, popular package. An Issue tells them that they shouldnt break the sandbox themselves by writing into the home dir.
- Uninstalling codium tries to uninstall gnome, rip.
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Switched to Silverblue, can't look back :)
https://github.com/flathub/com.vscodium.codium#sdks
snapcraft.io
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I think I may have just managed to piss off the whole community...
https://github.com/canonical/snapcraft.io please, stop spreading misinformation about snaps...
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snap... please die a slow and painful death
Don't like the "proprietarity" of snapcraft? OK, discard it and put flatpak. It will never be banned by Ubuntu. And yes, snapcraft.io available on github.
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RSS feeds for updated and new Snap packages?
Probably not, since a feature request for this has been open since 2018.
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is the software for the server of https://snapcraft.io/ closed or open source?
snapcraft.io - the frontend website, is open source - https://github.com/canonical/snapcraft.io
- what are the advantages and disadvantages of snaps?
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I've got karma to burn so why not?
What is the server code other than "something that distributes a .snap file"? Given that I can, if I want, take a .snap file to an airgapped machine and install it, it appears pretty trivial to offer alternatives to Canonical's infrastructure if anyone were particularly interested.
- Strong support for Snap, Ubuntu Core at Canonical conference
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what's really important
Snap store - aka snapcraft.io is already open-sourced under GPLv3., see here. Perhaps, you mean not that the code is closed-source but that Canonical won't relinquish any control to the community and will continue to enforce the snap ecosystem as an Apple-style walled-garden? If so, then I completely agree with that assessment. That IMHO is the core of what makes snap an inferior choice for the community.
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bro imagine being this bad, Canonical
snapcraft.io (e.g. snap store) has commits going back to Aug 16, 2017. Repo has GPLv3 license.
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Delicious Pie!
IMO this is mostly due to higher-ups at Canonical no longer giving a fuck about desktop, less so for the boots on the ground. Wimpress and Pope both left Ubuntu and I don't remember which one said it but one of the 2 had a tweet basically saying as much. But even without that, snaps have been around since at least Dec 11, 2014 and likely even earlier than that. But despite being around for over 8 years, there's still a bunch of common complaints and probably about 30-40% don't sound like they'd take a big company more than 6-12 months to address if they actually worked on it. Things like submitting a patch to the util-linux project to make cli tools like mount/blkid/lsblk/fdisk to make loop devices not be displayed by default (after all they effectively only "break" when snap is installed), following normal dot-prefix conventions in the $HOME folder, adding 1st party support for 3rd party repos (given the nature of FOSS, couldn't they even borrow the logic from flatpak?), adding optimizations to consume less disk space in the majority of scenarios. (I would say to also make snapcraft.io open-source, but after seeing this repo, it appears that common complaint may be off-base)
What are some alternatives?
void-packages - The Void source packages collection
flathub - Pull requests for new applications to be added
ide-flatpak-wrapper - Wrapper for setting up development environment in flatpak sandbox
reactjs.org - The React documentation website [Moved to: https://github.com/reactjs/react.dev]
snapstore - Minimalist Snap Store has been remade!
snapcraft - Package, distribute, and update any app for Linux and IoT.
com.unity.UnityHub
appstream - Tools and libraries to work with AppStream metadata
vscodium - binary releases of VS Code without MS branding/telemetry/licensing
gaming-graphics - Graphics stack useful as a content snap for gaming snaps
next-pwa - Zero config PWA plugin for Next.js, with workbox 🧰
warzone2100 - Command the forces of The Project in a battle to rebuild the world after mankind has been nearly destroyed by nuclear missiles. A 100% free and open source real-time strategy game for Windows, macOS, Linux, BSD+