![]() It did not leave around non-user owned files in my home directory. Its preference dialogue does show the "(as superuser)" bit. That last bit took all of two minutes and seemed to memory-wise never grow past 12M or so.īookworm itself is also not showing "(as useruser)" in its Window title, only "Bookworm". Just now installed Linux Mint 18.3 MATE into a 32-bit VirtualBox VM with 2G, fully updated it, installed the bookworm flatpak through the Software Manager and had it import 7x70 epubs into its library (490 that is, but with 7 copies for each of my 70 epubs so as to have a library of comparable size to you: bookworm does not detect them as duplicates, simply imports them all). That is exactly the type of thing flatpaks are supposed to solve. Other than the Steam flatpak tripping over a Music symlink in my home directory, I enjoyed seeing it it install and work on Mint 18.x: it did not when clean installed from the software manager on 17.x due to a shared library conflict with system-provided ones. This of course certainly has potential to in the end very significantly bloat memory requirements. This is to say that additional flatpak applications I'd want would need to by chance depend not only on the same general runtime type but also on a specific version to share an earlier one: to not introduce yet another to some/any degree separate environment. We get older.Ī thing on the other hand is: where I say Freedesktop, Gnome and KDE I should really say Freedesktop 1.6, Gnome 3.26 and KDE 5.9. Flatpaks are or can be as such more a method of allowing easy access to such divergent applications than anything else personally I tend to like being allowed things and, having these days outgrown a fair amount of geekness, sometimes even like being easily allowed them. Thing is though: both Steam (Freedesktop runtime) and KeePassXC (KDE runtime) would not improve all that much if installed not from flatpak only P圜harm (Gnome runtime) would when compiled natively integrate in my native Cinnamon environment. Certainly that is going to take a bit of memory (and loading time, and disk space). In for example my own case of having installed the flatpaks for Steam, P圜harm Community and KeePassXC I have when running them concurrently four fully separate environments loaded: a generic Freedesktop one, a Gnome one, a KDE one and my own native Cinnamon one. Swap space was also constantly loaded.Īlthough in this case it is probably more a matter of specifically bookworm being a load of crock, certainly it is one of flatpak's fundamental properties that it has potential to have its applications use a lot more memory than native ones.įlatpak apps load up their own "runtimes", potentially with other applications unshared environments including potentially unshared sets of normally shared libraries. YouTube sets this cookie to store the video preferences of the user using embedded YouTube video.To flatpak with 32-bit and 2GB RAM in general: With flatpak applications, there was a constant high demand for RAM. YSC cookie is set by Youtube and is used to track the views of embedded videos on Youtube pages. ![]() Quantserve (Quantcast) sets the mc cookie to anonymously track user behavior on the website.Ī cookie set by YouTube to measure bandwidth that determines whether the user gets the new or old player interface. This is a "CookieConsent" cookie set by Google AdSense on the user's device to store consent data to remember if they accepted or rejected the consent banner.Ĭriteo sets this cookie to provide functions across pages. ![]() Google AdSense sets the _gads cookie to provide ad delivery or retargeting. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads. Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns.
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