Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 26th Jan 2011 22:24 UTC, submitted by fran
Thread beginning with comment 459834
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This will never happen. The VLC people, the GPL people, the Open Source purists, etc etc will all get their panties in a wad over all sorts of issues of how pure and "open source" all the apps are, causing some very popular applications to never appear in the application store, and it will be rendered useless as a result. Mark my words!
Sorry, but this is nonsense. VLC could not be included in Apple app store because Apple's EULA effectively bans GPL'ed software form it. Regarding this app store your ranting about, I don't think they'll be any changes on distro's current software policies. And this is, for example, I expect Ubuntu and openSUSE to serve closed sourced software on their service but labelling it as "non free" or something alike. Just like now that they keep closed source repos. Even more, I expect Canonical to introduce software on their store you'll have to pay for.
Well, it looks like people from different distributions have got together and thrashed out some ideas that will make it easier to install applications.
They have decided to try and use software that is already in use by many users, which makes it more feasible than starting from scratch.
Remember, if this works out well, it will make it easier to install open source software as well as closed source software.
All in all, just the fact that they are working together is encouraging!





Member since:
2006-06-01
This will never happen. The VLC people, the GPL people, the Open Source purists, etc etc will all get their panties in a wad over all sorts of issues of how pure and "open source" all the apps are, causing some very popular applications to never appear in the application store, and it will be rendered useless as a result. Mark my words!