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  • I've read about someone's experience once that less detailed release note releases are more likely to be approved by store moderation without issue.

    It's probably more laziness / not seeing enough value in it though.

    I see lacking release notes everywhere - in many projects.

    Sucks when you're trying to asses necessity, risks, and changes of updates of apps, service infrastructure, or libraries.

    Good release notes are not hard if you have a good workflow. At my work project it's basically automated generated - thanks to a deliberate and conventional commit workflow.

    But few people see the need, the value, or have the initiative and thoroughness that would establish it.

  • I've been on Linux for over a decade. Two years ago, I installed Okular (pdf reader) on my friend's laptop. I was surprised to see it was a rather old Okular version. So the trouble goes further down. Maybe is just a lack of volunteers/ maintainers. Well, given Windows is paid, this would be just plain understaffing.

    It's worth mentioning that my current app store on Linux is flathub.org/setup (it's distro agnostic). I highly recommend you explore WSL and Flatpak (flatpak is the underlying 'packaging' tech behind flathub). Here's some good news from 2018, https://www.phoronix.com/news/Flatpak-Windows-Prototype

18 comments