(Replying to PARENT post)
There is no good Flatpak fronted to compare it to. The Flatpak project seems to believe it is Somebody Else's Problem, and consequently when everyone else poorly integrates Flatpak support into their traditional package manager frontend the Flatpak project gets to wipe their hands of it and say it isn't their fault. As a user, I don't really care who is at fault for a bad user experience if there is no good user experience alternative, and the lack of one reflects poorly on Flatpak regardless of who they believe is at fault.
That said, I'll take Flatpak over the traditional package manager with its limited and out of date software collection that requires an army of volunteer middle men to prop up.
(Replying to PARENT post)
(Replying to PARENT post)
This has been posted to HN so we can point and laugh, right? Because no other response is appropriate to this absolute nonsense.
(Replying to PARENT post)
4.2gb is a "really small base install" ????? WHAT
the windows users are infecting linux, and it shows
the amount of bloat these days is insane
(Replying to PARENT post)
The elephant-in-the-room issue, and the one that any debate about the Linux desktop as a platform must necessarily focus on, is: How do I get my application to my users? For historical reasons, there hasn't been a good answer to this question for a long, long time, and anything that improves on the status quo (Flatpak, Snap, AppImage) is indeed (part of) "the future".
Of course, this being Linux, "the future" won't consist of "this one thing that everybody uses". If that's the goal, it was unattainable from the beginning. I love that Flatpak is repository-agnostic. I love that Snap applications update automatically. But most importantly, I love that I have a choice between the two.