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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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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2 points

If you mean downloading random stuff from random websites, yes.

But they dont have installers, so no verification, no moving to locations where executing is allowed (on Linux the entire home is executable which is a huge security issue) no desktop integration, no context menu, no file associations.

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1 point

I do mean downloading random stuff from random websites.

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1 point
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But they dont have installers, so no verification

https://lemmy.ml/post/17283790/11897811

on Linux the entire home is executable which is a huge security issue

You still have to give the exec permission to the appimage.

no desktop integration, no context menu, no file associations.

Maybe no context menu depending on what you mean exactly, but the rest are fully possible and I do it on a regular basics with my appimages…

edit: Omg you are the guy from don’t use appimages, I see you haven’t changed one bit.

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3 points
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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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Appimages came before these tools, and the tools (forgot the name GearLever, AppimagePool is another one) came afterwards.

They are structurally better as they are external.

That verification is interesting. So it is another appimage, used to verify appimages? Are all Appimages using that, if not what percentage of the ones you know? And are tools like Gearlever enforcing or using that signature check?

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2 points

Are all Appimages using that, if not what percentage of the ones you know?

Usually if the appimage has a github release with a zsync you have that verification.

And are tools like Gearlever enforcing or using that signature check?

I don’t use gearlever, as far as I know gearlever doesn’t even let you sandbox the appimage like AM does. I don’t think any of those forces signature verification besides AppImageUpdateTool and that’s because that’s part of the zsync update process.

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