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posted by hubie on Tuesday March 07, @06:08AM   Printer-friendly
from the trust-control-and-monetize dept.

The Foss community is giving yet another try with an app store for all Linux OSes:

Some influential people in the open-source community are pushing for the adoption of a one-stop app store for Linux-based operating systems. The store would be built on Flatpak, a popular software deployment and package management utility, and it could provide customers with the same user-friendly approach other popular app stores in the consumer market are known for.

[...] The proposal's main goal is to "promote diversity and sustainability" in the Linux desktop community by "adding payments, donations and subscriptions" to the Flathub app store. Flathub is the standard app repository for Flatpak, a project described as a "vendor-neutral service" for Linux application development and deployment.

[...] The universal app store proponents say that "a healthy application ecosystem is essential for the success of the OSS desktop," so that end-users can "trust and control" their data and development platforms on the device they are using. Flathub has been jointly built by the GNOME foundation and KDE, and it isn't the only app store available in the Linux world.

Alternative solutions like Canonical's Snaps, however, are sitting under the control of a single corporation and aren't designed as a universal Linux app store from the get-go. Canonical has recently decided that neither Ubuntu, nor the other Ubuntu-based distros (Kubuntu, Lubuntu, etc.), will give their official support to Flatpak. Users can manually add the tool after installing the operating system, though.

Besides providing a universal app store for the entire Linux world, Flatpak supporters also want to "incentivize participation in the Linux application ecosystem," and remove financial barriers that prevent diverse participation. For this reason, the proponents are planning to add a new way to send donations and payments via Stripe within this year.


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  • (Score: 2) by stormreaver on Tuesday March 07, @09:33PM

    by stormreaver (5101) on Tuesday March 07, @09:33PM (#1295008)

    This has absolutely nothing to do with wine or forcing us to pay for Free Software. It's a way of making it very simple, reliable, and fast for regular users to install and use end-user software (in theory). In practice, it will all depend on the implementation. If done the way it has been presented, it can only help Linux adoption.

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