Install Firefox in a Snap on Linux
Mozilla has picked the Snap package system to deliver its application to Linux users.
Linux desktop has an app fragmentation problem. Each distribution has its own application distribution mechanism, which ends up duplicating maintainer resources and is almost always a bottleneck when it comes to delivering updates to apps.
The Linux desktop communities are trying to solve that problem with solutions like App Image, Flatpack, and Snaps. While Flatpack is backed by Red Hat/Fedora developers, Snaps is backed by Canonical. App Image is relatively independent. Once again there is fragmentation which means either app developers ‘waste’ developer resources and create a package for all three formats or choose one. Eventually the Linux world may settle down on one, but for now we have to deal with all of the three.
Mozilla has officially picked Snap to offer Firefox browser for Linux. According to Canonical, by launching as a snap, the Firefox Quantum browser is available to an increased amount of Linux users with the snap working natively on Ubuntu, Arch, Linux Mint, Fedora, Solus, Debian and other Linux distributions that support snaps.
“Mozilla has long been a leader in the open source space,” said Jamie Bennett, VP of Engineering, Devices & IoT at Canonical. “As such, we are very happy to announce that they are joining the community of applications already available as snaps. Through their unique format, snaps can help bring some of the world’s most popular apps to almost any Linux desktop, server, device or cloud machine, allowing users to select the right distro for them without having to worry about updates, security or compatibility issues further down the line.”
There are a lot of advantages of using Snap like mechanism over the traditional method as you get updates as soon as the vendor releases it, no need to add 3rd party repositories or wait for weeks for official packages to land in official repositories.
If you want to grab a snap of Firefox, visit this link: https://snapcraft.io/store.
Issue 230/2020
Buy this issue as a PDF
News
-
Elementary OS 5.1 Has Arrived
One of the most highly regarded Linux desktop distributions has released its next iteration.
-
Linux Mint 19.3 Will be Released by Christmas
The developers behind Linux Mint have announced 19.3 will be released by Christmas 2019.
-
Linux Kernel 5.4 Released
A number of new changes and improvements have reached the Linux kernel.
-
System76 To Design And Build Laptops In-House
In-house designed and built laptops coming from System76.
-
News and views on the GPU revolution in HPC and Big Data:
-
The PinePhone Pre-Order has Arrived
Anyone looking to finally get their hands on an early release of the PinePhone can do so as of November 15.
-
Microsoft Edge Coming to Linux
Microsoft is bringing it’s new Chromium-based Edge browser to Linux.
-
Open Invention Network Backs Gnome Project Against Patent Troll
OIN has deployed its legal team to find prior art.
-
Fedora 31 Released
The latest version of Fedora comes with new packages and libraries.
-
openSUSE OBS Can Now Build Windows WSL Images
openSUSE enables developers to build their own WSL distributions.