Cannot install libc6-dev : Depends: libc6 (= 2.35-0ubuntu3) but 2.35-0ubuntu3.1 is to be installed

Ralf Mardorf kde.lists at yahoo.com
Mon Mar 13 13:20:38 UTC 2023


On Mon, 2023-03-13 at 13:30 +0100, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Mon, 2023-03-13 at 22:57 +1100, Karl Auer wrote:
> > https://biplane.com.au/blog/?p=375
> I disagree. [snip]

Btw. a lot of FLOSS software is integrated into proprietary audio apps
as well as other apps running on Apple devices.

For example the LGPL3 Lensfun:

"Lensfun itself is only a library for correcting several artefacts and a
database for storing lens profiles. To actually use Lensfun to process
your images you need an image editing application with Lensfun support.

So far you can use Lensfun with the following applications:

    ACDSee commercial image viewer and editor (since version 9)
    Affinity Photo commercial image editor (since version 1.5)
    Darktable RAW processor and photo workflow software similar to Adobe Lightroom
    Digikam/Kipi image management application, supports Lensfun via Kipi-Plugin
    Exposure X3 commercial non-destructive RAW editor
    GimpLensfun GIMP plugin
    Hugin panorama stitcher (version 2011.4.0 - 2014.0.0)
    lensfunpy Python wrapper for Lensfun
    ON1 Photo RAW commercial RAW processor and photo editor
    Photivo photo processor application
    Rawstudio another raw processor
    Rawtherapee raw converter and image processor (since version 5.3)
    UFRaw is a standalone raw processor but also contains a GIMP plugin to load RAW image files"

- https://lensfun.github.io/usage/

A fun fact is that Linux supports vector and pixel graphic, photo and
publishing apps and those apps aren't bad, but those are all apps each
on their own. On Apple (and Windows) devices you get this combination as
a suite e.g. from Affinity, IOW they stay with the same user interface,
that allows you to stay by one workflow. When using different good FLOSS
apps on a Linux machine, you need to switchover from one user interface
to another, which breaks the workflow. Each app on its own is good, but
the combination of needed apps, the different approaches of different
developers who ignoring the users needs, render all those good apps
useless for a workflow to get things done without a hustle.

It's not that easy as replacing GRUB2 by syslinux, which is what I've
done for my bootloader. For some domains a user needs a combination of
apps. If this combination doesn't fit together, it's a big issue.




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