Universal package managers have taken over Linux... Atleast, one of them has, and that ended up being Flatpak. In this video, we go over why Linux users love...
You CAN do those, but essentially 100% of apps that regular people are gonna want will be: click mac download -> open file -> follow prompts. That’s the point of a standard, which is not to necessarily eliminate alternatives, rather to make a single one be the default for almost 100% of standard situations.
You CAN do those, but essentially 100% of apps that regular people are gonna want will be: click mac download -> open file -> follow prompts. That’s the point of a standard, which is not to necessarily eliminate alternatives, rather to make a single one be the default for almost 100% of standard situations.
Yes, for Linux it‘s like this typically (varies by distro):
Figuring out the best way to install the software often involves at least comparing two versions and deciding, which one you want.
macOS has many ways to install, but most software only choose one or two. And you usually get the same version regardless of install path.
For Linux you have several options to install and you don’t end up with the same version.