Le 17/06/2023 à 14:09, gene heskett a écrit :
On 6/17/23 04:44, didier gaumet wrote:
[...]
- if you want an even more user-friendly and guided approach, use an app store instead of a package manager: Gnome-software or Apper

I do use several AppImages because of debians glacial speed of updating software, so OpenSCAD, DigiKam, Cura and several other less often used apps are years out of date.  And bugs don't get fixed, apparently ever. Like the udev bug where it generates /dev/serial/by-path, but not /dev/serial/by-id. That is a total show stopper for people with a 3d printer, and you've known about it for 6 months, but it is not yet fixed in bookworm. Maybe trixie? A 2 line fix in /etc/udev/rules.d/60-serial.rules that was somehow dropped 6 months+ ago.  Is it available in backports for bullseye? Not listed if "packages" searches for backports.
[...]

Ah, my bad, I did not make myself clear enough:

while Gnome-software or Apper can be labeled app stores, the big difference between those and commercial app stores (Microsoft, Apple, Google and son on) is that you may set up several sources for the applications. For example; in Debian at this time, you may have these sources of software in Gnome-software, simultaneously:
- genuine Debian repositories
- Flathub.org (a repository of applications in flatpak format)
- snapcraft.io (a Canonical repository of applications in snap format. Beware that snap is to be removed from gnome-software features in the future)

For example,in Gnome-software, right now, you may want to install from flathub:
- openscad: not available (Bullseye: 2021.01-1, upstream: 2021.01)
- digikam: 8.0.0 (Bullseye: 7.1.0.2, upstream: 8.0.0)
- cura : 5.3.1 (Bullseye: 4.8.4, upstream: 5.3.1)

And another difference of thes app stores, this time compared to package managers, is that you wont find libraries to install

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