alexanderzhirov I have those problems with the flatpak oh so rarely, but lately. It seems there is a new version every week so I'm glad it's maintained---now I just got to remember to do it weekly.
snap zoom-client refreshing/installing issue
alexanderzhirov You might try flat seal. I had similar issues moving to the flat of Kodi (specifically being able to access network mounts) and flat seal allowed me to edit those permissions and get it working.
"Flatseal is a graphical utility to review and modify permissions from your Flatpak applications. Simply launch Flatseal, select an application and modify its permissions. Restart the application after making the changes. If anything goes wrong just press the reset button."
(https://github.com/tchx84/Flatseal)
never head of this until now. it's interesting. as far as alexanderzhirov 's problem, and to a smaller extent mine, the implication is some flatpak apps retain root privileges for some things? and that's what you'd use seal for?
paint me intrigued on this one.
brent I'm no expert, but the way I understand it is flatpak apps are running in something similar to a container and you may need to give them permissions in certain cases. Kodi had native permissions to access my local media folders, which would probably be fine in most cases, but all of my media is on a network drive and it lacked access. Flat seal made it really easy to just click on what I wanted it to have access to.
zmaint I forgot all about the container aspect--all this makes sense. There are features in zoom that my pc partner has and I dont (emojis, bells, whistles) have and I always thought it was a linux limitation. I'm going to install seal and see what it unlocks or grants or restricts. Thanks for the great info.
Hey thats cool program just installed.
zmaint I was answering @brent
I am like you, on the professional side, I keep on using ms-teams, zoom and webex because that's what our suppliers are using or that my company is enforcing.
But outside my professional activity, I see more and more people willing to use free tools that are more respectful of their (and my) privacy and that's quite a change. Still a few years ago, most people only wanted to use the applications from the bug tech.