@RedditEnjoyer@lemmy.world to linuxmemes@lemmy.world • 1 year agohell yeah mintlemmy.worldimagemessage-square162fedilinkarrow-up11arrow-down10
arrow-up11arrow-down1imagehell yeah mintlemmy.world@RedditEnjoyer@lemmy.world to linuxmemes@lemmy.world • 1 year agomessage-square162fedilink
minus-squareCronyAkatsukilinkfedilink0•1 year agoThat’s fine when you need only one or two things, but when you wan’t your whole system to be up to date as much as possible it becomes tedious.
minus-squareCronyAkatsukilinkfedilink0•1 year agoFor me it’s the fact that I almost always need a feature from a program that’s in a recent release that is never in debian/ubuntu until a couple years later.
minus-squareCaptain AggravatedlinkfedilinkEnglish0•1 year agoFairly long-term Mint veteran here: usually if I need software that’s more up to date than what’s in the standard repo, Flatpak will do.
That’s fine when you need only one or two things, but when you wan’t your whole system to be up to date as much as possible it becomes tedious.
And I’m questioning the need for that.
For me it’s the fact that I almost always need a feature from a program that’s in a recent release that is never in debian/ubuntu until a couple years later.
For every single package?
Just about 90% of packages that I wan’t to use
Fairly long-term Mint veteran here: usually if I need software that’s more up to date than what’s in the standard repo, Flatpak will do.