The Flatpak is already packaged and works well. It just needs to be maintained from a person that joins the Inkscape community.

This would allow further improvements like Portal support and making the app official on Flathub.

Update: One might have been found!

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-9 points

Oficial repositories, unoficial repositories, flatpak, snap… What happened to just donwload the app from it’s own creator and install on your machine? Why do we need every app being touched by some rando before I can install it on my box?

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17 points

Your wanted option is not gone, you can still download the binaries if the author presents them; or you can compile it from source. This is just another, more convenient way to distribute the program.

If you are looking to get your programs Windows-style, to download a binary or “install wizard”, then you can look into appimages.

Like any form of distribution however: someone has to offer this, be it the author or “some rando”.

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3 points

Appimages have no install wizard. And Windows executables have some weird signature verification which Appimages dont have at all.

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3 points

True. Still the most windows-like installation method.

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3 points
*

And Windows executables have some weird signature verification which Appimages dont have at all.

EDIT:

Appimages have no install wizard.

Appimagelauncher, gearlever, AM, etc. Which is the same as a install wizard since it integrates the appimage into the system. AppImages do not need to be extracted into the system which is what windows install wizards do.

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11 points

What happened to just donwload the app from it’s own creator and install on your machine?

That’s the Windows shit I specifically wanted to get away from

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7 points

What happened to just donwload the app from it’s own creator and install on your machine?

You have that option with the appimage, inkscape releases it themselves.

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4 points

Thats how packaging works.

On Android I use Obtainium, as the package manager deals with signature verification. On Linux, Flatpak is the only equivalent to Android apps.

RustDesk is the only Flatpak not from Flathub I use, because they have messed up permissions.

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5 points

There’s also Pied, which hasn’t gotten around to submitting to Flathub.

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2 points

Wow, cool app!

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1 point

Keep in mind the Rustdesk flatpak has full access to your machine and isn’t sandboxed

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1 point

Yes true, thats why it is not published on Flathub.

I will add an override to it that makes sense.

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2 points

Because it is better?

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