I am not familiar with this approach. How would the user install a
flatpack version on his computer. Would it need to be a Linux
distribution or could it be Windows 10 or MacOS? How would the user
access the installed Sugar - launch as an application in his os or
reboot / chroot as we do
Great!
I have thinking for a while about do the same with Sugar itself.
Flatpak looks like a good technology to distribute the project.
Gonzalo
On Thu, Apr 13, 2017 at 1:40 PM, Manuel Quiñones
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm working on a flatpak package for Sugarizer.
>
>
2017-04-14 2:00 GMT-03:00 Tony Anderson :
> I apparently misunderstood. I had thought you were working on Sugar. Does
> this address any current problem with installing Sugarizer?
> Does this flatpak option apply to Sugar?
No Tony, just Sugarizer.
> On 04/14/2017 12:51 PM,
I apparently misunderstood. I had thought you were working on Sugar.
Does this address any current problem with installing Sugarizer?
Does this flatpak option apply to Sugar?
Tony
On 04/14/2017 12:51 PM, Dave Crossland wrote:
Hi
Great work :)
On Apr 13, 2017 12:41 PM, "Manuel Quiñones"
Hi
Great work :)
On Apr 13, 2017 12:41 PM, "Manuel Quiñones"
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm working on a flatpak package for Sugarizer.
>
> Flatpak http://flatpak.org/ is the new way to distribute applications
> in GNU/Linux. Is great for many reasons. One reason is that the
Hi,
I'm working on a flatpak package for Sugarizer.
Flatpak http://flatpak.org/ is the new way to distribute applications
in GNU/Linux. Is great for many reasons. One reason is that the same
package works for any modern Linux distribution like Fedora, Debian,
Arch, Ubuntu. I made the package
6 matches
Mail list logo