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I've added a new card to the landing page of flathub.org yesterday, focused on games.
We have been trying to do this for quiet some time and I know that the results (as in what is in which category) are not perfect, but putting this out there hopefully helps us move things.
#linux #flatpak #Flathub #web #nextjs #tailwind #xdg #freedesktop
Is there a way to filter FlatHub for open-source software? I tried it a while ago involuntarily, because it got automatically enabled in the KDE package manager UI, and then I immediately nuked it when I realized, I had accidentally installed some proprietary software off of it…
Ah, thanks. Good to know that the metadata is there, it might just be a missing feature in Discover.
I did just poke around in Discover and couldn’t find a way to filter that…
Well, this was a while ago. I do know that Discover now at least shows whether an application is from the normal package repository or from FlatHub. They probably also show the license somewhere by now.
But yeah, it being obvious isn’t really good enough for me, in the sense that I currently simply have FlatHub completely disabled, because I do not care for having the proprietary noise in between. It makes Discover worse for me, because it becomes harder to find software I want. And then, yeah, I just figured I’d ask, because I do think it’s silly for me to shun a whole technology due to some presentation issue…
Is there a way to filter FlatHub for open-source software? I tried it a while ago involuntarily, because it got automatically enabled in the KDE package manager UI, and then I immediately nuked it when I realized, I had accidentally installed some proprietary software off of it…
My kde install is at home so i’ll have to check for that later, but here is how to do it on flathub and on gnome software:
Ah, thanks. Good to know that the metadata is there, it might just be a missing feature in Discover.
I did just poke around in Discover and couldn’t find a way to filter that…
You could use an alternate repo, like the fedora one which is curated to only open source software
it’s extremely obvious when it’s proprietary and when it’s not
Kde’s discover is balls, gnome software store is a whole lot better in this case
Well, this was a while ago. I do know that Discover now at least shows whether an application is from the normal package repository or from FlatHub. They probably also show the license somewhere by now.
But yeah, it being obvious isn’t really good enough for me, in the sense that I currently simply have FlatHub completely disabled, because I do not care for having the proprietary noise in between. It makes Discover worse for me, because it becomes harder to find software I want. And then, yeah, I just figured I’d ask, because I do think it’s silly for me to shun a whole technology due to some presentation issue…