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Joined 9 days ago
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Cake day: April 15th, 2026

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  • Just to be very clear: the name “immutable distro” is unfortunately a misnomer. In practice, the restrictions found on so-called “immutable” atomic distros are very tame.

    For example, on Fedora Atomic[1], it’s mostly a paradigm shift. That is, you can achieve (almost) everything that you can on a traditional, the only difference being how.

    So, if we would take OP’s query as an example, they are not able to do sudo dnf install vim btop. Instead[2], they have to do brew install vim btop. Additionally, these changes persist, as you’d expect. Please note that this is just one of the ways/methods you can achieve this on Bluefin (and other Fedora Atomic derivatives). Other methods include:

    • Install within a distrobox and export it.
    • Simply layer it.
    • Make a custom image that installs these by default and switch to said custom image.
    • Install as a sysext.

    As you’d expect, each one of these comes with its own set of tradeoffs.


    1. The atomic distro I’m most familiar with. ↩︎

    2. Knowing that they’re on Bluefin, a derivative. ↩︎




  • I wonder if they’ll one day just alias a bunch of stuff, kinda like what Ubuntu has done with forcing Snap down people’s throats. So, like:

    • sudo dnf install bottles actually doing flatpak install bottles
    • OR, e.g., sudo dnf install tldr actually doing brew install tldr
    • etc…

    I don’t think it’s necessarily bad as long as it’s very transparent on what it actually does (and why). And…, offers choice where applicable*.

    Or…, like, introduce a new package manager that basically functions as a front-end. Would that ((and/)or the earlier alias-thing) be worse than sticking to the development of a single package manager until it does all (à la Snap)?



  • If I may, I’d rather prefer a translation layer like Wine, but for Android. Thankfully, it’s in the works. Soon™.

    I do expect that Waydroid’s stocks will increase tremendously as Valve’s Lepton is based on it.

    As for your query, it depends mostly on your sensibilities:

    • Waydroid is lighter and is ever so slightly better integrated.
    • VB offers superior sandboxing (and thus improved security).

    FWIW, I’ve had better experiences with Waydroid, but your mileage may vary.