elfprince at first I thought "damn a VM just for apps" then I read it:
"Containers are a form of virtual machine. A traditional virtual machine has a complete installation of an operating system inside it. Often, they’ll have a desktop environment too, and you can use them just as though they were a physical computer.
A container, on the other hand, only contains the minimum amount of operating system and tools to run the programs that the container is dedicated to supporting."
A container is very much like a VM to me in this context. they both offer a layer of isolation from core files. this app is a docker.
Then there's this "We can install any application in our container, either from the Arch repositories or from the AUR, and run them on our host computer."
Solus AUR 🤯
edit: commands for sudo dnf
and sudo pacman
in this tutorial. can you imagine? eopkg who?🙂