> if Spotify users reject it, they can always switch to PPA or something else
Some apps, like Chromium have no alternative ppas available.
I installed KDE Neon 20.04 and when I discovered that Chromium was being switchted to snap, I searched for any current *.deb out there. NO proper ppas, just found some outdated Chromium 1-3 versions behind the current version.
If it wasn't for the KDE from Neon, I would have switched of distro in the hour. I switched to Chrome instead.
Got some old compiled Chromium just to have the thing available (I can just run it when I need it, it takes maybe 1/4 of sec to start).
Just hope Canonical doesn't try its snap thing in more critical packages or (FAR) worst, in the LTS server versions.
I would be getting popcorn to see the show when half the Internet start to ditch the LTS overnight over some half-propietary half-baked software being put in charge of its otherwise perfectly GPLed infrastructures.
Right, this is why Canonical moved Chromium to snaps - It's a ton of effort building Chromium for 20.04, 18.04, and all the intermediate releases every few weeks for a package that's in universe.
It's cheaper/easier for them to publish one version across all of Ubuntu.
Some apps, like Chromium have no alternative ppas available.
I installed KDE Neon 20.04 and when I discovered that Chromium was being switchted to snap, I searched for any current *.deb out there. NO proper ppas, just found some outdated Chromium 1-3 versions behind the current version.
If it wasn't for the KDE from Neon, I would have switched of distro in the hour. I switched to Chrome instead.
Got some old compiled Chromium just to have the thing available (I can just run it when I need it, it takes maybe 1/4 of sec to start).
Just hope Canonical doesn't try its snap thing in more critical packages or (FAR) worst, in the LTS server versions.
I would be getting popcorn to see the show when half the Internet start to ditch the LTS overnight over some half-propietary half-baked software being put in charge of its otherwise perfectly GPLed infrastructures.