Hey all
1) I stumbled across the EasyOS Website & in turn found the Puppy Linux Forum. I've read through the EasyOS site (some parts multiple times). I still need to re-read much of it. From the EasyOS site, I've followed the links here. I've played with EasyOS, EasyOS-Buster, & EasyPup, but mostly with EasyOS. Even did a frugal install. Gotten frustrated with it, put it down for a bit, but I'm too intrigued to give it up. I've started reading some of the different threads in the general Puppy Forum, even found some help there with appimages. I'm a little concerned about what translates over to EasyOS & what doesn't. On the EasyOS website, Barry says, "It is only natural that a lot of "puppyisms" can be found in Easy, though, it must be stated that Easy is also very different, and should not be thought of as a fork of Puppy."........... So I'm wondering what are the differences I should be aware of, so I'm not wasting time looking for answers in the wrong places?
2) I've read in the EasyOS portion of the Puppy Forum, concerning the Buster series dying a slow death, that it is suggested to rely more on portable apps & sym-links (did I spell that right?).
A) Elsewhere in the general Puppy Forum, EXE file apps were suggested. To my limited knowledge, they need either Wine, PlayonLinux, or one of the other alternative applications. I noticed in the EasyOS-Buster, that Wine & PlayonLinux were available for download, but didn't see either of these in EasyOS. Since in the discussion I read, that portable apps were implied to be used in EasyOS in place of using downloaded applications from the .deb packages, How does one get these to work in EasyOS?
B) I've tried to get appimages to work in EasyOS & EasyOS-Buster, with some trouble. I installed appimagelauncher (which I will refer to in question 3 later. Since that didn't seem to work, I found in my reading in the general Puppy Forums, some suggestions that did work. It seems that I need to open a terminal in the folder where my appimages are located & run the appimage plus the command "--no-sandbox". It seems this involves some extra steps from what I"m use to, & which I'm willing to do if there is no other way, but is there a simpler way?
C) Does the --no-sandbox command negate my being able to run the app in a container? If so, if I run the whole desktop in a container, then does that solve the problem?
D) Elsewhere in the forum I read that portable apps could be stored in a folder on another partition, or on another hard drive then use a sym-link (forgive me if this isn't the proper term) to run the app from the OS. My question about this practice, does running the system in Ram where I can't access drives other than USBs, does the sym-link overcome this? It maybe since that discussion was about other puppy distros, it doesn't apply concerning Easy.
E) Again, elsewhere in the forum, I've read that there are some old archives or older forum posts where someone made sfs from the portable apps? So far I haven't found any in my searches, does anyone have an idea where I can search?
3) I installed the .deb package appimagelauncher into EasyOS & EasyOS-Buster. It seemed to install alright & populated in my menu, but it didn't help any at all concerning running my appimages. I started wondering if it really installed, so I installed another .deb package (Brave) as a test. Again, it appeared to install alright & populated my menu. Yet when I clicked on the Brave icon, it didn't run. The same for EasyOS-Buster. My question is, is there another step in getting installed .deb packages to work, or are these distros not meant to have .deb packages installed locally? I have noticed that in another systemd-free system, that I would always get errors when updating, upgrading the system, or installing other packages, related to appimagelauncher. Yet it worked & all my appimages would populate in my menu, where I could click on them & run them.
4) Concerning sym-links, is this somehow different than the regular links that I'm used to in Debian & Ubuntu type distros? Can anyone link me to some reading material concerning this?
5) As mentioned, my experience has mostly been Debian & Ubuntu type distros. What frame of mind changes or ways of thinking & handling things do I need to be aware of concerning working with Easy?