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325 lines
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325 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 733
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Title: HPR0733: Linux Packaging Systems (too many)
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0733/hpr0733.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 01:40:06
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---
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.
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Hey, this is Marcos. This is my second podcast for hacker public radio. I hope you guys like it.
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It's something that's kind of a matter that's become a little more important to me lately because they've been looking around.
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It's actually package managers. I know I know everybody's favorite and I got the wonder.
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So, you know, the joke used to be a piece of software is not done until it had an embedded email client.
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And then the joke turned into a software is not done until it had an embedded web client.
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And now the joke seems to be becoming piece of software is not done until it has an embedded package manager.
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There seems to be a great proliferation of package managers. Every distro has got its own.
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And there is only a handful of formats behind them, but every distro has got its own front end, the package manager.
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What does the Linux user do when they find a typo in a Linux package?
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Why they forked their package manager and they create a new one because this time they will do it right.
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Yeah, not the finished joke in the world, but it does really seem to be accurate and seems to reflect what we're seeing.
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I'm seeing in the Linux community. So anyway, I'm just a user.
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I don't have any great, you know, contributions to Linux.
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I've been in Linux since 96 since kernel version 2.0.36, I think.
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I started out on Slackware back then and over the years I've used Red Hat, Ubuntu, now geez.
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Sorry, Red Hat, Ubuntu, Gen2, Fedora, Unity Linux, Manjury of a devian.
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I'm sure there are some other stewards who can't think of them at the moment.
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And I found it's pretty regularly between like five different distros, all of which use different package managers, of course.
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And it started to become kind of annoying, actually.
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It seems to get in my way of both getting work done at work.
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Since one of my jobs is I work, I get to spend a lot of my time during the day on Linux.
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Like 95% of my time spent on Linux, well, this is really nice.
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And my company works with other companies and sometimes they ask us to help out with some of the admin stuff.
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And I'm comfortable doing that. So I spend some time doing that.
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And all the customers, there's no one flavor of all the customers use.
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So I have to kind of be familiar with Red Hat, devian, mint, scent, actually not so much mint.
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But definitely scent, a little Ubuntu.
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So I'm familiar across, I'm not great at any of them, but I can definitely get around all of them.
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And it seems to me that none of them have any real features that the other ones either don't already have or couldn't be added fairly regularly.
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So this seems to be a lot of duplication after you end the package management system.
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It's annoying because if I'm working on a system, then one I have to know what system it is because I have to know what package manager to use.
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So if I got a type Yum and it's a devian system, obviously that's not going to work.
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And vice versa.
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And then going to track down packages for a specific version of a distro, things like that add up.
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It gets annoying and it gets in my way.
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I have to spend time doing all this, tracking out packages and a lot of stuff rather than actually getting my work done.
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It's really annoying and it's starting to get old.
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Especially when no package manager seems to be any better than any others.
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The second thing is when I'm on my own time and I'm just going around on the next.
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I don't want to try things or play or do different things or whatever.
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I have the same problem, is I got to fight the package manager or the packaging system to get anything done.
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It's annoying.
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It really is.
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Sometimes I don't have a lot of time.
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Sometimes I go, oh, I got a half hour free here.
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I like to do something.
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I have to spend 25 minutes just getting some dependencies installed so I can try something.
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Well, that basically eats up all my time.
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I can't do anything.
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So it's just frustrating.
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And I'm tired of that.
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I don't know if I'm the only one in the world that actually cares about this.
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But anyway, that's my little France.
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So I was talking to, I was on the Unity Linux form.
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And I, one of the devs there sent me a link to packagekit.org's package manager feature comparison matrix.
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It's www.packagekit.org slash pk-matrix.html.
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There are 17 package managers listed.
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17.
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Are you kidding me?
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Come on, people.
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You have nothing better to do but create yet another package manager?
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Do everything does the same.
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Like there's no package managers that I've run across.
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And I think I've used a total of seven or eight different package managers.
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None of them are really any better than any others.
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So I don't get what the whole deal is.
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This seems like everyone, it seems like it's, I don't want to insult people here.
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But it really does seem like it's just a bunch of developers who decide that,
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oh, I don't want anyone else does it.
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I want to do it my way.
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And that's what they do.
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They create their own system.
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And since Linux is all about choice, they're fully free to do that.
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The thing is, is then you split the community.
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We only have so many people actively doing the work.
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Even companies like Red Hat, Canonical, we have X number of people doing the work.
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And so when you create yet another packaging system,
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or you insist on doing things your way rather than sharing,
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you get in the way of getting things done.
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So packaging system today is just like the sound system was 10 years ago.
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Back when we had ESD, we had ART.
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Do you guys remember those fun days?
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Getting sound to work on Linux was a pain in the butt.
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If you wanted to play two different music things that had two different applications
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play sound at the same time, that was black magic.
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Yeah, I'm glad those days are gone.
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Even if you don't like pulse audio, you have to admit that the sound now
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we're in much better position and we're in much better condition now when we're 10 years ago.
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And there's no arguing that.
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That's a fact.
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And I'm happy that that's the case.
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Can you imagine if sound and printing and authentication were just like package management is?
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It would be a nightmare.
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We wouldn't be anywhere.
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We would be a trouble.
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So, anyway, I think package management now is like sound was 10 years ago.
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And it really would be nice if the groups could either get together
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or have a benevolent dictator step up and basically drive everything to one.
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Package managers aren't about choice.
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I can't be on a devian box and say, oh, here's an RPM.
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I want to install.
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I can't be on an RPM.
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I read that box and say, oh, here's a dev or an e-build.
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Here's a package I want to install.
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That's not choice.
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It's like, I'm going to disser what I have to use their packaging system.
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Choice is like, hey, I'm on a Linux box.
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Pick any distribution.
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I can't, I need a script that'll do something.
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Oh, I can write it in Perl.
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I can write it in Bash.
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I can write it in Python or Ruby or PHP or C show or
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whatever, you know, that's choice.
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Package managers are not about choice.
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They're basically about their vendor lock-in is what they are.
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And I don't like that.
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I think it's going to get us into trouble and it's preventing us from moving forward on some things.
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You know, I worry.
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I really try to add to the community.
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I really do.
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I try to grow it.
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I try to get people involved.
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I try to get back more than I take.
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I really do.
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And it feels like package managers are just the opposite.
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They will, they see, they'll see the same picture.
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And I think there's very smart people involved in package management.
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They'll see the same problem and they want to solve it.
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But they want to solve it their way.
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They want to be the ones that solve this problem.
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And the problem is, is we've got a bunch of people doing this,
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so we don't end up with one solution.
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We end up with a bunch of solutions.
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And since none of them are really compatible,
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it doesn't help us anywhere.
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It splits us.
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You know, it's like, what'd it be nice if you could just say,
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like, you got to say when those, like, oh,
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here's a download package or a Mac.
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Like, hey, here's your one package that will run everywhere.
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Right?
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It's like, okay.
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Would it be nice on the make sure I was like, well,
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what this, are you?
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Oh, I need an RPM.
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Oh, it's redhead 5.5.
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We're sure to have 5 versus redhead 6.
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Oh, I need these RPMs.
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Oh, hey, it's a Devinian Boxer.
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Oh, I'm going to jump to.
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What do I do?
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Well, you can run your program called, you know,
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RPM to e-builder or RPM CPI.
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Whatever the program is.
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Just strip it out and converge.
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That doesn't help us in it.
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Right?
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Being able to convert between packages doesn't help us
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because it doesn't take care of the dependency issues.
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Now, I know there's a lot of devels are smart and, yeah,
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they got it, yeah, they got it.
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And I'm running a thing, so I'll shut up.
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I had a couple of concerns though.
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One, there's a certain number of people who do the package it.
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Right?
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These are packageers.
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They're the unsung heroes.
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Right?
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They're the ones who take the software and update the packages.
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Make sure the dependencies are there.
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Make sure it builds and compiles.
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This is installable and they do the testing.
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These people burn out.
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They don't last forever.
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How many times have you heard, well, we do more if we had more
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packageers, right?
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But people burn out and they go away and do other things.
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Or, I was like, well, our distro just doesn't have enough
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manpower.
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We can't do all these packages.
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Like, oh, he's only just released a new version of Firefox.
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We've got to go create the new RPMs.
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All right?
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We've got to create new tarballs.
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If you're a large distro with lots of manpower, that's great.
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But you're telling me your package people don't turn over.
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Wouldn't be better if we could pool the resources and just have one
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package to worry about.
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Wouldn't it be so nice?
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So, anyway, that's that little rant.
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So I've mentioned that I believe the packaging systems now are like
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sound was 10 years ago.
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Pulse Audio has put us in much better place than Arts, ESD,
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and all those other little warring sound systems did 10 years ago.
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Now, I'm not saying Pulse Audio is great and I'm saying we're
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a great shape because specifically of Pulse Audio.
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The main thing about Pulse Audio is it's one system that everyone
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seems to be pulling together to use.
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That is where the strength is.
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I believe there are some issues with Pulse Audio.
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I have issues with, but I'm still glad it's here.
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Also, I believe the packaging systems are about vendor lock-in.
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Not about choice.
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If you can, I do, I think, that's what it's going to turn into.
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It's about locking people into using, like, you try to get people
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to use, oh, well, you have to use our devians or our dead
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packages.
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Oh, hey, I have to use these Europeans.
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Oh, you need to use the e-bills.
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It's like, come on.
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That's just about locking people into your distro.
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A lot of packaging, people who write packaging systems seem to
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think that their way is better than the other way.
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I've heard this a couple times and I find it silly.
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There's a lot of smart people working on packaging systems to
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think any one of you know better than all the rest of it is silly.
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And it's a little bit arrogance.
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A lot of you guys are really smart.
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So I think you can probably put something over, actually, work.
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I really too.
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Let's see.
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I also think that in about 10 years or less, we're going to start
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seeing the distros use those packaging systems as clubs to beat
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other distros.
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Now, given us GPL or everything's out there and things like that,
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it probably won't be quite that easy to do.
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But I do believe that when non-technic people start taking
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over some of the bigger distros, which currently right now are red-hat
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and Ubuntu in 10 years who knows.
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But I think when the non-technical people get into position and start
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making decisions, they're going to start using whatever resources they
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have available to start making money.
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Because that's what it's about for those distros.
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That's when the trouble's going to start.
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I think is there going to use whatever lock-in they can to keep the
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customers with them.
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And since most things are, since everything's open source,
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the few things remaining are, you know, one of them is the package system.
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And so this worries me a little bit, long-term.
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It's just such a duplication of effort.
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It's like, yeah, you got this, you got to make all these different
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packages for the same software.
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And yeah, I know dependencies work different, there's little issues
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to that.
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But those are excuses.
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You know, we have a Linux kernel that runs on everything from wristwatches
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to mainframes, to supercomputers, to tablets.
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And you're telling me we can't come up with a packaging system?
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Come on.
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I'm not.
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I was born in the dark, but it was on last night.
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Don't give me that crap.
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Anyway, I guess that's better for this podcast.
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Anything is, I didn't want people to get caught up on the semantics.
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And I tried out to be a rant too much.
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My point is, why do we have so many packaging systems and package managers?
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Now, the big ones are RPM and depth for Red Hat and Debian.
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Those probably, I'd say, between 16 and 70% of the splitting market.
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Now, there's others, right?
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They eat up the rest of that, 20 or 30%.
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There's e-builds for, you bunch it, I'm sorry, for Gen2.
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There's tarballs, you know, slackware.
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Vecta Linux uses these TLC files.
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Arch Linux uses its thing.
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They're compressed files.
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There's a distro called PZ, which is a Turkish distro.
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And it's its own format.
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And that's just the formats, right?
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That's not even included in the package managers.
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You know, we got apt, canary, entropy, old package,
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Pac-Man, p-root, PZ, pole deck, portage, slapped, smart snap.
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They hurt me, you know, zipper.
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And there's others out there too.
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These links are all in the show notes.
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But it's like, am I the only one who thinks that all these package managers
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is just a waste of effort?
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Package management has been around since the 90s.
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We're going into the second decade, actually third decade,
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of package management on Linux.
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And you're telling me that we haven't come up with a better way of doing this,
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that's still all these little fiefdoms of people wanting to do it their way?
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Come on, let's move into the 2011.
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Can you imagine the sound was still this way?
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Please, this is a plea.
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My point is, I want to build, to be part of a community,
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to make it better.
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And all these different package managers,
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it's not helping things, basically.
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It's just people doing things their way because they can.
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It's not about choice.
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The choice thing is, I'm trying to help make Linux better.
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And having 20 different ways to install a package
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and needing to know 20 different methods across all Linux to do something,
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is hurting us.
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So anyway, this turned into a bit of a rant and a plea.
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It wasn't my original intent.
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But this is my podcast, I hope you all liked it.
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Look at the show notes, if you're interested in that stuff,
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I will do my part.
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I said, I'm trying not to be one of those people who just comes in
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and say, oh, you guys should do this when you leave.
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If I can help, cut down on the number of packaging systems on Linux,
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send me an email.
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Let me know how.
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I mean, it'd be great if we could have any end one that would work across everything.
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Yeah, Debian, RPM, whatever, they can still keep their formats.
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But if we had one system, the two, the big guys would agree to start using,
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that would be great.
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Anyway, I'm not a packageer.
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I can't do everything I need help.
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I'm just a member part of the community.
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Anyway, see you all later.
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This mark goes.
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Bye-bye.
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Bye-bye.
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Bye-bye.
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