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Original post on mastodon.kodesumber.com

Feel an anomaly. Kdenlive on fedora as rpm or flatpak package are newer than on flathub.

Stale version on flathub usually because packager are 3rd party or from community. But this kdenlive flatpak on packager flathub has verified to be the owner of kdenlive.

@kdenlive

#kdenlive #fedora […]

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Original post on webpronews.com

The Quiet War Over Linux App Packaging: Why One Developer Ditched Flatpak and Never Looked Back A prominent tech writer's public abandonment of Flatpak for Snap has reignited Linux's fierce...

#AppDevNews #Canonical #Snap #Store #Flathub #Flatpak #vs #Snap […]

[Original post on webpronews.com]

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I think we need a way to tag apps on Flathub as sending your input to an online LLM. If you do too, maybe give this issue a thumbs up? github.com/ximion/appstream/issues/...

#linux #LinuxApps #appstream #flathub #flatpak

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Install Audimorf on Linux | Flathub Convert audio files simply and quickly

My first app on on Flathub :)

https://flathub.org/en/apps/moe.liam.audimorf

#flatpak #flathub #linux #gnome

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**Is the classic image meme dead, orburied under an avalanche of AI slop? _Memerist_ , a new(ish) native meme generator for Linux, emerged on Flathub recently to help dig them out.** _Memerist_ is a native (GTK4/libadwaita) app for Linux desktop. It is technically an image editor with a focused set of features, geared to those who want a convenient, local tool to quickly create and share popular memes. While the primary use case is for making memes, _Memerist_ will open any image file. You can use it to add text and simple effects to anything – pursuit of a LOL or an upvote needn’t be the only reason. Several meme templates come built-in, but you can create and import your own for future use. I tried the (never unfunny) ‘two buttons’ meme template to add custom text to. Text content, font, font size and opacity can be adjusted, with on-canvas preview to see how the text looks in position. It’s possible to rotate text without losing the ability to edit it, which is great to angle things to the perfect angle. You can drag text (and image overlay) layers around to reposition. There’s no way to scale image overlays once imported, so size them correctly first, and no layers panel (for an app this focused, that’s fine) so click an element to access its edit properties in the sidebar. Other features include cropping and transform controls, blend modes, opacity and two basic global image filters (represented by icons I can’t quite decipher – they apply a colour pop or a pixelated effect to the whole graphic, respectively). Memes export as PNG files to ensure there’s no overt compression to spoilt your creation (the images on this blog tend to look awful because they get triple compressed from JPEG to WebP on upload, then re-compressed in WebP by our CDN, fwiw). ### Why not use an online meme generator? Meme apps so last decade? Take me back Meme generators are not new, and you can find plenty of them online. But they have their own frustrations: accounts, watermarks, upload limits or privacy concerns (if you’re making a meme out of a personal pic). Plus, many online tools to create memes have drifted toward AI generation and away from the simple template-and-text workflow that _Memerist_ favours – a <4MB offline tool sidesteps those concerns (and means one less tab open in your browser). Not that a dedicated tool is required to do this as you could use _GIMP_ , _Pinta_ or even _Gradia_ to quip-ify a popular meme template. But the feature set here is deliberately narrow. There haven’t been many dedicated meme generator apps for Linux – at all – as fund on other OSes. That makes this one all the more special, so I figured I’d spotlight it. _Memerist_ is free, open source software available on Ubuntu (and other Linux distros) from Flathub, with source code available on GitHub. The app just hit version 0.4.2. If you tried this out in December (when it was in alpha), be sure to update. **Download _Memerist on Flathub._**

Memerist is a new desktop meme generator for Linux Is the classic image meme dead, or buried under an avalanche of AI slop? Memerist, a new(ish) native meme generator for Linux, emerged on Flathub ...

#News #Apps #on #Flathub #memes

Origin | Interest | Match

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Memerist is a new desktop meme generator for Linux Is the classic image meme dead, or buried under an avalanche of AI slop? Memerist, a new(ish) native meme generator for Linux, emerged on Flathub recently to help dig them out. Memerist is a native (GTK4/libadwaita) app for Linux desktop. It is technically an image editor with a focused set of features, geared to those who want a convenient, local tool to quickly create and share popular memes. While the primary use case is for making memes, Memerist will open any image file. You can use it to add text and simple effects to anything – pursuit of a LOL […] You're reading Memerist is a new desktop meme generator for Linux, a blog post from OMG! Ubuntu. Do not reproduce elsewhere without permission.

Memerist is a new desktop meme generator for Linux Is the classic image meme dead, or buried under an avalanche of AI slop? Memerist, a new(ish) native meme generator for Linux, emerged on Flathub ...

#News #Apps #on #Flathub #memes

Origin | Interest | Match

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Download graph for LogoRRR

Download graph for LogoRRR

Seeing a massive spike in LogoRRR downloads on #flathub following the latest release! 🚀

Huge thanks to the community for the support. If you haven't tried it yet, check it out yourself:

flathub.org/en/apps/app....

#linux #indiedev #flatpak #opensource

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Added GetArtworkFd method (!4) · Merge requests · mpris / mpris-spec · GitLab This MR adds a GetArtworkFd method that uses a file descriptor instead of a URL. If the URL is a file location, apps using Flatpak will not...

I created a proposal to add a new method to the MPRIS spec that fixes the sharing of artwork across #flathub packages.

If this sounds important to you, please read my proposed change to the spec and leave suggestions there:

gitlab.freedesktop.org/mpris/mpris-spec/-/merge...

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Original post on social.vivaldi.net

Today, a friend asked me how to record a podcast (from a closed platform), so I found a simple app called Reco that does exactly what he needs.
I really like the ecosystem of simple, easy-to-use apps that is growing around #GNOME and #Flathub.

In case you ever need it: 👇 […]

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Obrazek wyróżniający wpisu poświęconego aplikacji Tonearm. Nad zrzut ekranu programu nałożone są ikony tworzące działanie: Tidal + GNOME = Tonearm. Poniżej fioletowy pasek z białym napisem „Programy Obadania Warte #10”.

Obrazek wyróżniający wpisu poświęconego aplikacji Tonearm. Nad zrzut ekranu programu nałożone są ikony tworzące działanie: Tidal + GNOME = Tonearm. Poniżej fioletowy pasek z białym napisem „Programy Obadania Warte #10”.

## POW #10 – Tonearm, nowy klient Tidala dla Linuksa

Dzisiaj polecam wam świetną i dobrze wyglądającą linuksową aplikację do streamowania muzyki.

horodecki.net/2026/02/16/pow-10-tonear... #adwaita #Codeberg #flathub #gtk […]

[Original post on horodecki.net]

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Fix Flatpak "No Such Ref in Remote Flathub" Error [SOLVED] - OSTechNix Fix "No such ref in remote flathub" errors instantly. Clear cached refs, run repair, clean flatpak packages. Works on all Linux versions.

Fix "No such ref in remote flathub" errors instantly. Clear cached refs, run repair, clean flatpak packages. Works on all Linux versions.

Full guide here: ostechnix.com/fix-flatpak-...

#Flatpak #Flathub #Linux #Troubleshooting #PackageManagement

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Pensemos que si lo distribuye por #flathub sería la primera tienda que entra oficialmente en #SteamOS.

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flathub.org is showing an error

flathub.org is showing an error

#Flathub has issues with website and API, so that my nightly #EU_OS builds stopped working. 😬

Point taken: mirror important #Flatpak apps to the #katello @foreman repo.

#foreman #cfgmgmtcamp

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Mes excuses à Flatpak ***Préambule :** je participe à Libre à vous !, l'émission de radio de l'April, diffusée en région parisienne sur la radio Cause Commune (93.1 fm)](https://cause-commune.fm/) et sur Internet dans le reste du monde. J'y tiens une chronique humoristique mensuelle intitulée Les humeurs de Gee.*

🗓️ LA SEMAINE DERNIÈRE : « Mes excuses à Flatpak »
Est-ce que le meilleur Gnunux, c'est pas juste une Debian stable avec quelques Flatpak quand on a besoin d'un truc récent ?
▶️ grisebouille.net/lhdg32-mes-e...
#chronique #GriseBouille #radio #numérique #flatpak #flathub

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Mes excuses à Flatpak ***Préambule :** je participe à Libre à vous !, l'émission de radio de l'April, diffusée en région parisienne sur la radio Cause Commune (93.1 fm)](https://cause-commune.fm/) et sur Internet dans le reste du monde. J'y tiens une chronique humoristique mensuelle intitulée Les humeurs de Gee.*

📰 LA SEMAINE DERNIÈRE : « Mes excuses à Flatpak »
Pourquoi Flatpak (et le magasin Flathub), malgré les critiques, bah c'est plutôt en très chouette projet !
▶️ grisebouille.net/lhdg32-mes-e...
#chronique #GriseBouille #radio #numérique #flatpak #flathub

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L'idée de Flatpak, c'est que vous construisez votre logiciel dans un système « virtualisé », c'est-à-dire que vous avez une sorte de petite boîte qui contient un sous-ensemble des choses dont vous avez besoin sur votre système pour faire fonctionner ce logiciel, et lorsque votre logiciel est distribué, eh bien cette petite boîte est réutilisée sur les systèmes de tout le monde, ce qui fait que vous n'avez plus besoin d'adapter votre logiciel à toutes les configurations de Gnunux possibles et imaginables.

Alors sur le papier, c'est sympa, mais évidemment, on récupère les inconvénients de la gestion de logiciels « à la Windows » : un logiciel devient mécaniquement plus lourd à installer puisqu'il va embarquer un certain nombre de dépendances, et même si ces dépendances peuvent encore être partagées, la multiplication des versions – qui permettent une plus grande simplicité du point de vue développement – implique nécessairement un plus grand espace disque occupé du point de vue utilisation.

Et force est de constater qu'au lancement de Flatpak, en 2016, la réception dans l'univers gnunuxien a été pour le moins… froide. Moi le premier, au départ, j'ai regardé le projet avec beaucoup de dédain, considérant que ça cassait la philosophie de Gnunux – simplicité, sobriété – et que c'était la porte ouverte à des logiciels lourdingues, mal foutus et mal packagés… puisque ça n'obligeait plus les dev à se tenir à jour sur les versions des bibliothèques et à rester compatible avec les systèmes de paquets habituels.

L'idée de Flatpak, c'est que vous construisez votre logiciel dans un système « virtualisé », c'est-à-dire que vous avez une sorte de petite boîte qui contient un sous-ensemble des choses dont vous avez besoin sur votre système pour faire fonctionner ce logiciel, et lorsque votre logiciel est distribué, eh bien cette petite boîte est réutilisée sur les systèmes de tout le monde, ce qui fait que vous n'avez plus besoin d'adapter votre logiciel à toutes les configurations de Gnunux possibles et imaginables. Alors sur le papier, c'est sympa, mais évidemment, on récupère les inconvénients de la gestion de logiciels « à la Windows » : un logiciel devient mécaniquement plus lourd à installer puisqu'il va embarquer un certain nombre de dépendances, et même si ces dépendances peuvent encore être partagées, la multiplication des versions – qui permettent une plus grande simplicité du point de vue développement – implique nécessairement un plus grand espace disque occupé du point de vue utilisation. Et force est de constater qu'au lancement de Flatpak, en 2016, la réception dans l'univers gnunuxien a été pour le moins… froide. Moi le premier, au départ, j'ai regardé le projet avec beaucoup de dédain, considérant que ça cassait la philosophie de Gnunux – simplicité, sobriété – et que c'était la porte ouverte à des logiciels lourdingues, mal foutus et mal packagés… puisque ça n'obligeait plus les dev à se tenir à jour sur les versions des bibliothèques et à rester compatible avec les systèmes de paquets habituels.

🎙️ NOUVELLE CHRONIQUE : « Mes excuses à Flatpak »
Je vous explique pourquoi, en fait, Flatpak, bah c'est un truc bien foutu, bien pratique et qui œuvre au respect des standards (si si).
▶️ grisebouille.net/lhdg32-mes-e...
#chronique #GriseBouille #radio #numérique #flatpak #flathub

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SongRec 0.5.0 porta miglioramenti alla compatibilità con Wayland SongRec 0.5.0 introduce un nuovo percorso per le traduzioni, un nome aggiornato su Flathub, miglioramenti all’interfaccia e fix dedicati a Wayland

SongRec 0.5.0 introduce un nuovo percorso per le traduzioni, un nome di pacchetto aggiornato su Flathub, miglioramenti all’interfaccia e fix dedicati a Wayland #Software #Wayland #Flathub

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GitHub - kolunmi/bazaar: New App Store for GNOME New App Store for GNOME. Contribute to kolunmi/bazaar development by creating an account on GitHub.

The new #flatpak / #flathub software store Bazaar lets you save your favourite flatpaks… how exciting!

(That’s a #linux app thing for my Mac and Windows friends)

github.com/kolunmi/bazaar

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Install GWeatherRouting on Linux | Flathub Open-source sailing routing and navigation software

GWeatherRouting, the #opensource #sailing routing software is finally on #FlatHub! Install now: flathub.org/en/apps/org....

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Flathub Sees Over 435 Million Downloads in 2025 Flathub celebrates a milestone with over 435 million downloads in 2025. Discover the impact of this platform on software distribution and user experience. The post Flathub Sees Over 435 Million Downloads in 2025 appeared first on Linux Today.
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Original post on mas.to

Any #FlatHub experts on here know what it means when FlatHub labels a build as "reproducible" at <https://builds.flathub.org/reproducible>, please? I thought it would mean that someone has checked that compiling the package from source using the recipe it provides produces the same binary […]

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Anyone else having issues with #Flathub downloads at the moment? status.flathub.org says no issues but Downfor says otherwise. #linux Can't install anything, just sits and loads endlessly.

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#Flathub offers download statistics for applications in the past half year. This is a list of estimated average install per day over the second half of 2025:

#FreeCAD (pictured): 950
#LibreCAD: 130
#OpenSCAD: 75
#Blender: 900
#Inkscape: 1000
#GIMP: 2600
#Audacity: 800
#LibreOffice: 2000

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**If you use Flathub on Ubuntu you likely already use (or at least know of)_Bazaar_ , a GTK4/libadwaita frontend that makes it trivial to search, manage and update Flatpak apps from this popular repo.** Bazaar is updated frequently (I’ve covered some updates in my monthly _Linux App Release Roundup_ series). Over the past few weeks, the app has been updated with more improvements, features and design tweaks – some rather obvious! For instance, Bazaar now has a **new app icon** : Bazaar app icon before and after I know everyone cares about icons as much as I do, but a well designed icon with a clear metaphor (and, ideally, some colour to keep our screens looking likely) is always nice to see. The new Bazaar icon adopts a market stall motif, complete with striped awning and selection of goods on show: a circle, triangle and square (riffs on the official Flathub logo for which Bazaar is a frontend). As a thematic play, it’s solid and feels a better fit than the old ‘price tag’. Elsewhere, Bazaar makes app listings more informative with the addition of an app permission system. This shows a ‘risk’ assessment label on app listing pages which, when clicked, lists what packages can and can’t do if installed: Glanceable permission lists You can now **sign in with your Flathub account** (yes, these are a thing). Doing so means you can sync bookmarked via Bazaar and the official Flathub website, as well as manage them. This replaces Bazaar’s earlier ‘star count’ system. Logging in is done via GitHub, GitLab as well a few other options (all developer related, but you don’t need to be a developer to make use of this for bookmarking, but you will need an account with one of those services). Click the menu option and follow the steps. Login with Flathub to stash/sync app bookmarks Other changes of note across the recent few updates: * ****New “Only Show Verified” filter option**** * **Category pages for most categories** * **“Adwaita” or “KDE” categories**(based on DE) * **Additional Pride flag options for progress bars** * **Improved text selection in app descriptions** * **GNOME search provider results jump to app page** * **Disk cache writes reduced** * **Background status shown in popover** On a broader point, the progress Bazaar has made across its UI and feature set, as well as it’s focus on surfacing ways users can support their favourite app makers through whatever support mechanisms (buying coffees, donations, etc) the developer offers. Similarly, the app is happy for users to pin their proverbial colours to the mast, offering the option to theme the progress bar using the colours of various Pride flags – disability, genderqueer, intersex, demigender, and biromantic pride flags added recently. New ‘verified results only’ filter option Those sensitive to social issues _or_ hectic colours needn’t fret; out of the box, Bazaar uses a solid colour for the progress bar during update, install and removal actions. ## Getting Bazaar on Ubuntu You can install Bazaar from Flathub. It’s a small download of itself but if you don’t have the GNOME runtime installed, that will be pulled in as well. That will make the download seem excessively large, but remember: runtimes are shared between apps.

Bazaar (Desktop Flathub App) Gets Considered Updates If you use Flathub on Ubuntu you likely already use (or at least know of) Bazaar, a GTK4/libadwaita frontend that makes it trivial to search, ma...

#News #App #Updates #bazaar #flathub

Origin | Interest | Match

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**If you use Flathub on Ubuntu you likely already use (or at least know of)_Bazaar_ , a GTK4/libadwaita frontend that makes it trivial to search, manage and update Flatpak apps from this popular repo.** Bazaar is updated frequently (I’ve covered some updates in my monthly _Linux App Release Roundup_ series). Over the past few weeks, the app has been updated with more improvements, features and design tweaks – some rather obvious! For instance, Bazaar now has a **new app icon** : Bazaar app icon before and after I know everyone cares about icons as much as I do, but a well designed icon with a clear metaphor (and, ideally, some colour to keep our screens looking likely) is always nice to see. The new Bazaar icon adopts a market stall motif, complete with striped awning and selection of goods on show: a circle, triangle and square (riffs on the official Flathub logo for which Bazaar is a frontend). As a thematic play, it’s solid and feels a better fit than the old ‘price tag’. Elsewhere, Bazaar makes app listings more informative with the addition of an app permission system. This shows a ‘risk’ assessment label on app listing pages which, when clicked, lists what packages can and can’t do if installed: Glanceable permission lists You can now **sign in with your Flathub account** (yes, these are a thing). Doing so means you can sync bookmarked via Bazaar and the official Flathub website, as well as manage them. This replaces Bazaar’s earlier ‘star count’ system. Logging in is done via GitHub, GitLab as well a few other options (all developer related, but you don’t need to be a developer to make use of this for bookmarking, but you will need an account with one of those services). Click the menu option and follow the steps. Login with Flathub to stash/sync app bookmarks Other changes of note across the recent few updates: * ****New “Only Show Verified” filter option**** * **Category pages for most categories** * **“Adwaita” or “KDE” categories**(based on DE) * **Additional Pride flag options for progress bars** * **Improved text selection in app descriptions** * **GNOME search provider results jump to app page** * **Disk cache writes reduced** * **Background status shown in popover** On a broader point, the progress Bazaar has made across its UI and feature set, as well as it’s focus on surfacing ways users can support their favourite app makers through whatever support mechanisms (buying coffees, donations, etc) the developer offers. Similarly, the app is happy for users to pin their proverbial colours to the mast, offering the option to theme the progress bar using the colours of various Pride flags – disability, genderqueer, intersex, demigender, and biromantic pride flags added recently. New ‘verified results only’ filter option Those sensitive to social issues _or_ hectic colours needn’t fret; out of the box, Bazaar uses a solid colour for the progress bar during update, install and removal actions. ## Getting Bazaar on Ubuntu You can install Bazaar from Flathub. It’s a small download of itself but if you don’t have the GNOME runtime installed, that will be pulled in as well. That will make the download seem excessively large, but remember: runtimes are shared between apps.

Bazaar Sets Out its Stall with a New App Icon, New Features If you use Flathub on Ubuntu you likely already use (or at least know of) Bazaar, a GTK4/libadwaita frontend that makes it trivial to sea...

#News #App #Updates #bazaar #flathub

Origin | Interest | Match

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Bazaar Sets Out its Stall with a New App Icon, New Features If you use Flathub on Ubuntu you likely already use (or at least know of) Bazaar, a GTK4/libadwaita frontend that makes it trivial to sea...

#News #App #Updates #bazaar #flathub

Origin | Interest | Match

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**If you use Flathub on Ubuntu you likely already use (or at least know of)_Bazaar_ , a GTK4/libadwaita frontend that makes it trivial to search, manage and update Flatpak apps from this popular repo.** Bazaar is updated frequently (I’ve covered some updates in my monthly _Linux App Release Roundup_ series). Over the past few weeks, the app has been updated with more improvements, features and design tweaks – some rather obvious! For instance, Bazaar now has a **new app icon** : Bazaar app icon before and after I know everyone cares about icons as much as I do, but a well designed icon with a clear metaphor (and, ideally, some colour to keep our screens looking likely) is always nice to see. The new Bazaar icon adopts a market stall motif, complete with striped awning and selection of goods on show: a circle, triangle and square (riffs on the official Flathub logo for which Bazaar is a frontend). As a thematic play, it’s solid and feels a better fit than the old ‘price tag’. Elsewhere, Bazaar makes app listings more informative with the addition of an app permission system. This shows a ‘risk’ assessment label on app listing pages which, when clicked, lists what packages can and can’t do if installed: Glanceable permission lists You can now **sign in with your Flathub account** (yes, these are a thing). Doing so means you can sync bookmarked via Bazaar and the official Flathub website, as well as manage them. This replaces Bazaar’s earlier ‘star count’ system. Logging in is done via GitHub, GitLab as well a few other options (all developer related, but you don’t need to be a developer to make use of this for bookmarking, but you will need an account with one of those services). Click the menu option and follow the steps. Login with Flathub to stash/sync app bookmarks Other changes of note across the recent few updates: * ****New “Only Show Verified” filter option**** * **Category pages for most categories** * **“Adwaita” or “KDE” categories**(based on DE) * **Additional Pride flag options for progress bars** * **Improved text selection in app descriptions** * **GNOME search provider results jump to app page** * **Disk cache writes reduced** * **Background status shown in popover** On a broader point, the progress Bazaar has made across its UI and feature set, as well as it’s focus on surfacing ways users can support their favourite app makers through whatever support mechanisms (buying coffees, donations, etc) the developer offers. Similarly, the app is happy for users to pin their proverbial colours to the mast, offering the option to theme the progress bar using the colours of various Pride flags – disability, genderqueer, intersex, demigender, and biromantic pride flags added recently. New ‘verified results only’ filter option Those sensitive to social issues _or_ hectic colours needn’t fret; out of the box, Bazaar uses a solid colour for the progress bar during update, install and removal actions. ## Getting Bazaar on Ubuntu You can install Bazaar from Flathub. It’s a small download of itself but if you don’t have the GNOME runtime installed, that will be pulled in as well. That will make the download seem excessively large, but remember: runtimes are shared between apps.

Bazaar Sets Out its Stall with a New App Icon, New Features If you use Flatpak apps on Ubuntu you likely already use (or at know of) Bazaar, a GTK4/libadwaita frontend that makes it easy to search,...

#News #App #Updates #bazaar #flathub

Origin | Interest | Match

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Rückblick auf Flathub 2025 Flatpak ist hier, um zu bleiben. Das belegen die Zuwachszahlen von Flathub, dem zentralen App-Store für Linux-Anwendungen im Flatpak-Format. 2025 brachte 21,6 % mehr Downloads als das Vorjahr.

Rückblick auf Flathub 2025 linuxnews.de/rueckblick-a... #flatpak #flathub #linux #linuxnews

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