Solus 4.1 Released
- Edited
Harvey honestly the quality of the snap seems to be (and I suppose this makes sense) independent of the distro. My dual boot laptop has solus and zorinos on it and at one point fedora silverblue and the snaps that gave me trouble on one system, tended to give me trouble on the other. For example bitwarden's snap has always worked flawlessly. Now chromium on the other hand.....
I would also say the opposite has been true in my experience with flatpaks. Some flatpaks just seem to not like certain distros.
Harvey An to be clear because I've seen this confusion before. Snap packages are NOT replacing all native packages this has never been a thing that was even suggested.
Well, we did say that we would be converting Third Party to Snaps. But in the category of "easier said than done" I think it's more likely that we will use ypkg instead.
tobcro I understand that snaps etc are not replacing native packages and I also understand that it is a lot easier involving different universal package formats than doing some magic .deb extraction thingy that is only used in Software Center.
Snaps aren't easier than repackaging debs. You have to spend a significant amount of time working with upstream to get them included in the Snap Store, even after managing to build one. If they already exist, maybe. It was a long long time ago that Ikey made that announcement and we were hoping that Snaps would have better integration and selection by now. I can't tell you exactly how we will handle the next chapter of Third-Party's existence, but I can tell you that the build system it relies on is getting nuked from orbit.
Slightly off topic..maybe...but.. WOW, new releases sure boost forum traffic.
Thanks! :-) I've just update, and also read the release notes - and I just have to say - I LOVE THIS OS!
btw, I'm a dedicated fan of budgie and will definitely keep it on my main box, but I'll have to scrounge up another computer to try out Plasma. It's a happy chore.
Congrats to the devs for a great release! Great work!
This is a compliment I am giving, and hoping Core will think so: having an older system, I noticed no significant changes. Visually it's crisper. Performs crisper. Libre Writer launches a heck of a lot faster, thank you.
Me not noticing any major changes is a compliment because the nature of operating systems, all platforms, is a butterfly effect where major/minor changes often have many unintended consequences.
The opposite happened here! Thanks again.
- Edited
Lucien_Lachance You should partition manually (e.g. using gparted) before running the installer in order to be allowed to created the EFI partition on the disk. Then in the installer you can select to use the whole disk and partition automatically, and it will allow to create the EFI partition there. The installer doesn't handle multi-disks systems very well.
- Edited
elfprince Sure. Be advised that you will lose data, so make backups.
Boot the live ISO, and run GParted. Re-create a GPT partition table on your disk, add a 550 MiB fat32 EFI partition and an ext4 partition for the rest, though details don't matter at this point because the installer will overwrite it. Then once you created the partitions, you can run the installer, select this disk as a target, and select to use the whole disk with automatic partitioning. Then in the step where it asks where to put the EFI partition, it will propose to create a new one on that disk.
That's what I had to do in order to have the installer offer to put the EFI partition on the target disk, instead of on some other disk.
DataDrake Snaps aren't easier than repackaging debs. You have to spend a significant amount of time working with upstream to get them included in the Snap Store, even after managing to build one. If they already exist, maybe. It was a long long time ago that Ikey made that announcement and we were hoping that Snaps would have better integration and selection by now. I can't tell you exactly how we will handle the next chapter of Third-Party's existence, but I can tell you that the build system it relies on is getting nuked from orbit.
Very satisfied with this answer, thank you for taking the time to explain
I decide to eliminate Windows (after 20 years of boring running!) and Ubuntu from my laptop as I tried Solus with live CD. It blows me away. Best OS I'ver tried. Thank You for your great job! I've to learn as much as possibile now.
first time on plasma and i like it, well done Solus-team
- Edited
Justin Yes of course (this is why I said though details don't matter at this point because the installer will overwrite it
in my explanation).
If I just create a gpt table, and then use automatic partitioning during install, it doesn't allow to create an ESP partition on that drive, instead it will only offer to use the partition of my other drive. I had to go through manual partitioning first and go through the motions of creating some random ones.
While I've considered myself a diehard Budgie fan - I've been really really enjoying new Plasma edition, so much so that I've gone ahead and installed it on my main box. No regrets.
Loving the Plasma ISO! I did notice that if I did not attempt to get my comp's location automatically, a kernel panic ensues. The installer works fine if you allow it to get the location automatically.
Great! Solus is my favorite Linux distro! Thanks!