dino,

Never use flatpaks for stuff available in your packet manager…

Jonnsy,

Why not aren’t flatpaks safer. I removed firefox on tumbleweed and installed the flatpak because its updated faster.

RageAgainstTheRich,

You’re right. Don’t listen to the dumbdumb.

henfredemars,

I use flatpak for virtually everything because sandboxing your applications from each other and from your private data is a great idea to improve your system security. This helps prevent one compromised app from taking actions that affect the rest of your system.

For example, I have the VLC flatpak and used flatseal to revoke internet access because I only use it to play files. If a file tries to exploit VLC, it will not be able to upload any data or communicate with the attacker’s servers. I revoke any permissions my apps don’t actually need.

There are a few exceptions though. I run development and administrative tools directly because I do actually want unrestricted access to the system for these apps.

lemmyvore,

But what if someone attacks a development tool!

AProfessional,
zingo,

“Core apps” are better on baremetal for seamless system integration.

Just use flatpaks for everything else.

MyNameIsRichard,
@MyNameIsRichard@lemmy.ml avatar

DBeaver because it’s not in the repos or obs

banazir,
@banazir@lemmy.ml avatar

I like Bottles. Makes Wine less of a hassle.

Lojcs,

The one that causes dependency version conflicts when installed normally

the_postminimalist,

proprietary software that I don’t trust, or programs that aren’t on zypper

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