When people talk about censorship, they usually mean of media. Yes, I'm aware that the US government is an evil institution that targets activists and whistleblowers. You'll never believe me, but I actually despise my government and nearly every person in it. However, authoritarian regimes also strike down those people, but additionally censor the media on top of it. So to say that state censorship is worse here and now is just asinine. There's no need to make things up to seem worse than they are when they're already very bad, it just leads to people swinging at ghosts.
bear
What I said was that people in the west are subjected to orders of magnitude of western propaganda, and perhaps should worry about that first.
I'm capable of worrying about two things. Perhaps even three on a good day.
Chomsky even pointed out recently that censorship in the west now is even worse than it was in USSR.
Media being bad because capitalism pushes them to do evil to further their own ends is not the same thing as censorship enforced with state violence. These are both bad things, but uniquely bad in their own ways. I'm sad that Chomsky's age has caught up to him and he can no longer distinguish the two.
Imagine thinking any large state isn't constantly injecting propaganda into the Internet. Couldn't be me.
People are fine. Hierarchy turns man into monster. Destroy the hierarchy, destroy the beast.
- Flatpaks are usually fresher than point release distro packages
- Flatpaks are distro-agnostic
- Flatpaks are easily containerized for increased security and privacy
- Flatpaks can guarantee you have a known-good dependency chain directly tested by the developers/maintainers themselves
- Flatpaks can be installed and managed entirely in userspace
Android managed it, so can desktop Linux. We just need manufacturers who will ship it as default.
This is the only answer, and anybody who doesn't agree just doesn't understand users. They just use whatever you give them.
We all go down this hole at the start. The truth is, you should only reserve IPs if you actually need it to stay the same. You don't need to check IPs as often as you think, I promise. The only segmentation and planning you should do for a home network is for subnets/vlans; LAN, Guest, IOT, Server, etc.
Instead of managing the IP addresses, just manage hostnames. Make sure every device with a customizable hostname is easily identifiable. This will help you so much more in the long run.
That's what I do. All my IOT stuff that I can't get wired or via Zigbee/Z-Wave goes on a separate VLAN along with my Home Assistant server. I have an mDNS repeater for ease of access to TV stuff via apps (might spin TVs off into its own VLAN, just haven't gotten around to it) but a 1-way firewall rule that only allows the main network to initiate connections. Certain devices which don't need internet at all get static IPs and completely firewalled.
The reason Linux only grew with the Steam Deck is because an operating system only grows if it's preinstalled on a popular device. Average users do not install their own OS. If you were actually in tune with average users, you would know this. It has nothing to do with Linux users making jokes amongst themselves.
What a weirdly specific thing to get mad about.
You already have most of the major dependencies installed natively as they are depended on for many other packages, and you're not including the space they take up as part of installing the native package, but you are including them as part of the flatpak.
Flatpaks literally improve this. The core system itself remains extremely minimal and lean when you use containers, in both the server and desktop space. This greatly improves stability and longevity. We all know how much of a pain it is to do a point release upgrade on a system with tons of installed software. Flatpaks do not have this problem because they are independent of the system and each other.
It is necessary, and it's not junk.
Much like Debian packages, the Debian wiki is stale and outdated.