Why Steam on Linux matters for non-gamers
Posted Sep 22, 2013 20:50 UTC (Sun) by
khim (subscriber, #9252)
In reply to:
Why Steam on Linux matters for non-gamers by lsl
Parent article:
Why Steam on Linux matters for non-gamers
They provide convenience. Tons of it.
Really? I somehow don't find it more “convenient” when I find out that to run latest version of GIMP I must upgrade the whole thing with unpredictable results.
Or may be you wanted to say that they provide “convenience for packagers”? Well, may be, but I'm, as user, is not impressed.
For the majority of those programs I don't really care what exact version I'm running but just that it's recent and bugs get fixed. So I simply install it from the distribution repo und get it updated through yum/apt/zypper/pacman. I don't have to track upstream myself.
If you don't care about version of the software then why would you want to track it at all? This makes no sense! Something like monolithic Android release will work just as well.
And what do you do with a few programs which you do care about?
There I just pull the code from git or hg and work with that.
Wow. That means that if I want to just use some features from latest released version of Inkskape I'll need to become a co-developer? Thnks, but no, thnks. Most my friends are not software engineers, they don't want to be a software engineers and they just want to draw, of play or write, they do not want to pull the code from git or hg and work with that—and so, increasingly, do I. The fact that source code is available should not mean that only someone who can actually track dependencies and compile it deserve to use it.
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