LAS
September 25, 2018
I recently went to Libre Application Summit (LAS) 2018 in Denver, CO. I went there to present the release of Freedesktop SDK 18.08 along with Tom Coldrick, Adam Jones.
There were plenty of interesting talks. I will not cover everything. But I would like here to talk about what I took out of it.
One of the interesting part of the conference was the different talks given from Aleix Pol and Albert Astals Cid from KDE. We got an interesting overview of their views, their process and what they provide to both users and developers. It is important for the developer to reach the user and address their needs and that promptly. The release process of KDE applications is very intensive with a cycle of only four months. Discover, their application installation interface, gives the choice to the user what application backend to use: distribution package, Flatpak or Snap. While they still prefer the distribution packages, it seems it is something that might change. The reason mentioned was the issues due to PPAs. This sounds like a good move.
This is in contrast with what Elementary OS is doing. Cassidy James Blaede and Daniel Foré presented their view of a more homogeneous application ecosystem where technologies are recommended to developers to provide a better experience for both the developer and the user. They are slightly more controversial and try to rethink software development approaches open-source has been using for a long time. While I am not sure all will be popular in FOSS, I am looking forward to the positive outcomes of this experiment. One thing interesting from their side is the monetization of FOSS applications, the way to remind users that “free” software means freedom, but they should still pay (what they want) for software.
From Endless, Matthew Leeds talked about Flatpak application distribution through USB keys and local network. This was interesting and technical. The architectural design is well thought. The user experience shown during the demo at the end seems very good.
Other interesting Flatpak technical talk was Alex Larrson’s technical walk-through of Flatpak. This was interesting and this is the kind of talk I wished I had heard before submitting my first patch to Flatpak. This was very simple and still covered a lot. I recommend watching the video.
On the side of user perspective we had interesting feedback by Ryan Gorley from FreeHive on the state of free software for digital artists. It is interesting to have the testimony of a professional on the use of raster/vector graphics editors, 3D modelers, sound editors, etc. He also provided his view on how to make FOSS more popular. Interestingly, several points were quite ideological about FOSS, which I do not think most of users care about. But in his view FOSS can make the user feel empowered.
Looking forward to LAS 2019.