Flatpaks aren’t huge at all. This is a debunked myth. I can’t recommend reading this article enough.

  • Quack Doc@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    The issue with flat packs is the more you use it, the higher the chance that you get less shared runtimes and the higher the chance of the duplication. And at some points it really does get to awfully ridiculous levels.

    A while back, I had run everything I possibly could with Flatpak to the point I’d even make my own Flatpak to try and see how well it would work. Instead of using the AUR. And it worked great for the first little while. I’d installed all of my apps and it was fine, but as I kept using the system, kept installing new apps and not uninstalled the old ones, it really started to build up awfully quick, especially with older apps.

    I feel like the usefulness of flatpaks is the inverse parabola, where it’s extremely useful in the center use, but when you go to either side of it, it becomes less and less useful.

    Apologies for any incoherentcy this was written with a speech 2 text.