EmulationStation Desktop Edition is a great front-end open source app for managing various emulators. A big 2.0 release went up recently too! What does it support? It works with the likes of various Commodore Amiga, Google Android, various Apple models, various Arcade machines, various Atari machines, various Nintendo machines and the list goes on for quite a while.
Some of what's new in the 2.0 release includes support for many new systems, a whole new modern theme engine, a rewritten rendering system using shaders, vertical screen support, improved rendering speed and performance, lots of quality of life improvements to make using it just nicer overall, lower CPU use and much more. It's a rather long changelog for the 2.0 update.
Check out the overview of what's new below:
Direct Link
See more on the website.
Quoting: legluondunetI'd highly advise to use appimagelauncher, should be in most distributions community repos and does a great job with handling appimages (semi installing them, creating shortcuts...)Quoting: LinuxerQuoting: CyrilQuoting: LinuxerAww there is no snap for it or a flatpak
An AppImage is not good for you I assume?
I installed it from the AUR on my side.
downloaded it now but it didnt open when clicking for some reason appimages never worked forme
Appimage are made to greatly facilitate Linux users desktop experience, how it is possible this do not work for you? Do you use an exotic Linux Distribution with minimal libraries installed? i just tested emulationstation-de appimage and it just work (after a little chmod +x command).
Quoting: constThe main appimage I use is Cura (as repositories generally don't have the latest, and it pesters to upgrade every time it launches). Would be nice if appimages had a more integrated way to manage new versions, etc, like Flatpak does.Quoting: legluondunetI'd highly advise to use appimagelauncher, should be in most distributions community repos and does a great job with handling appimages (semi installing them, creating shortcuts...)Quoting: LinuxerQuoting: CyrilQuoting: LinuxerAww there is no snap for it or a flatpak
An AppImage is not good for you I assume?
I installed it from the AUR on my side.
downloaded it now but it didnt open when clicking for some reason appimages never worked forme
Appimage are made to greatly facilitate Linux users desktop experience, how it is possible this do not work for you? Do you use an exotic Linux Distribution with minimal libraries installed? i just tested emulationstation-de appimage and it just work (after a little chmod +x command).
Quoting: Linuxerdownloaded it now but it didnt open when clicking for some reason appimages never worked forme
did you right click the icon and make it executable ?
is there a way to bring up some sort of ES UI and exit directly back ? i did do some searching but didn't find anything other than the aforementioned analogue clicks.
Quoting: LoftyIm trying out EmulationStation Desktop right now instead of vanilla retroarch, the one issue im having is that i can't directly exit a game back to ES ? The idea is to click the analogs down at the same time i believe but this does nothing. i can press the home key on my 8bitdopro2 and bring retroarch menu up though and then manually exit the game then retro arch.. seems clunky.It is clunky, but is actually just how the Playstation works... always irritated me.
is there a way to bring up some sort of ES UI and exit directly back ? i did do some searching but didn't find anything other than the aforementioned analogue clicks.
Quoting: CyrilI honestly prefer something with better integration to my system and easier updating.Quoting: LinuxerAww there is no snap for it or a flatpak
An AppImage is not good for you I assume?
I installed it from the AUR on my side.
Though thankfully, there IS Bauh which makes installing and updating AppImage easier. And they maintain a database of extra AppImage sources on top of AppImageHub, so maybe someone can ask for this to be added ther (I personally doubt I'll ever use this, since it doesn't seem like ith as Switch emulation integrated yet).
Quoting: LoftyIm trying out EmulationStation Desktop right now instead of vanilla retroarch, the one issue im having is that i can't directly exit a game back to ES ? The idea is to click the analogs down at the same time i believe but this does nothing. i can press the home key on my 8bitdopro2 and bring retroarch menu up though and then manually exit the game then retro arch.. seems clunky.
is there a way to bring up some sort of ES UI and exit directly back ? i did do some searching but didn't find anything other than the aforementioned analogue clicks.
Iirc, start+select should do the trick. At least they do with EmuDeck
Quoting: fenglengshunWhat's annoying is we're ending up with the same nonsense we did before. Oh, we have RPM, tar.gz, deb... oh wait, now you're saying .deb between Ubuntu and Debian aren't compatible; and rpm between Suse and RH aren't compatible...Quoting: CyrilI honestly prefer something with better integration to my system and easier updating.Quoting: LinuxerAww there is no snap for it or a flatpak
An AppImage is not good for you I assume?
I installed it from the AUR on my side.
Though thankfully, there IS Bauh which makes installing and updating AppImage easier. And they maintain a database of extra AppImage sources on top of AppImageHub, so maybe someone can ask for this to be added ther (I personally doubt I'll ever use this, since it doesn't seem like ith as Switch emulation integrated yet).
Now come along Flatpak, universal package management! Except now there is Snap and AppImage, which are also universal package management! Though AppImage is kind of lacking in the management department! I haven't heard of Bauh, I'll have to check that out, as I do use a few AppImages. But at least we're not like Windows, where you pretty much always have to go to a site, hope it's the manufacturer's site, and download an installer that may or may not have been tampered with, etc.
Quoting: slaapliedjeEh, Flatpak is basically universal except in Ubuntu-land, and even in Ubuntu it's just a matter of installing. The only people who wouldn't install it are the ones who don't mind Snap or just don't know about flatpak (unlikely, unless they're just using Ubuntu for college classes).Quoting: fenglengshunI honestly prefer something with better integration to my system and easier updating.What's annoying is we're ending up with the same nonsense we did before. Oh, we have RPM, tar.gz, deb... oh wait, now you're saying .deb between Ubuntu and Debian aren't compatible; and rpm between Suse and RH aren't compatible...
Though thankfully, there IS Bauh which makes installing and updating AppImage easier. And they maintain a database of extra AppImage sources on top of AppImageHub, so maybe someone can ask for this to be added ther (I personally doubt I'll ever use this, since it doesn't seem like ith as Switch emulation integrated yet).
Now come along Flatpak, universal package management! Except now there is Snap and AppImage, which are also universal package management! Though AppImage is kind of lacking in the management department! I haven't heard of Bauh, I'll have to check that out, as I do use a few AppImages. But at least we're not like Windows, where you pretty much always have to go to a site, hope it's the manufacturer's site, and download an installer that may or may not have been tampered with, etc.
AppImage is a very different thing, they're closer to portable apps and I don't see anyone on Windows complaining about portable apps vs .exe/.msi installed apps.
Snaps itself has a place in CLI/server environment, it's just Canonical insisting on using it for everything and in such an in-your-face kind of way that makes people annoyed.
I don't think it's as much a problem as some make it out to be, just use whichever has most of your apps. They're just tools in the end.
Quoting: fenglengshunThe difference, I'd say, is that pretty much all apps on Windows have been in the past an exe/msi file, and installs on your system. The only difference with portable ones, is that it doesn't install it, it's just... there. AppImages are similar. At least with the integration stuff, it creates a launcher, etc.Quoting: slaapliedjeEh, Flatpak is basically universal except in Ubuntu-land, and even in Ubuntu it's just a matter of installing. The only people who wouldn't install it are the ones who don't mind Snap or just don't know about flatpak (unlikely, unless they're just using Ubuntu for college classes).Quoting: fenglengshunI honestly prefer something with better integration to my system and easier updating.What's annoying is we're ending up with the same nonsense we did before. Oh, we have RPM, tar.gz, deb... oh wait, now you're saying .deb between Ubuntu and Debian aren't compatible; and rpm between Suse and RH aren't compatible...
Though thankfully, there IS Bauh which makes installing and updating AppImage easier. And they maintain a database of extra AppImage sources on top of AppImageHub, so maybe someone can ask for this to be added ther (I personally doubt I'll ever use this, since it doesn't seem like ith as Switch emulation integrated yet).
Now come along Flatpak, universal package management! Except now there is Snap and AppImage, which are also universal package management! Though AppImage is kind of lacking in the management department! I haven't heard of Bauh, I'll have to check that out, as I do use a few AppImages. But at least we're not like Windows, where you pretty much always have to go to a site, hope it's the manufacturer's site, and download an installer that may or may not have been tampered with, etc.
AppImage is a very different thing, they're closer to portable apps and I don't see anyone on Windows complaining about portable apps vs .exe/.msi installed apps.
Snaps itself has a place in CLI/server environment, it's just Canonical insisting on using it for everything and in such an in-your-face kind of way that makes people annoyed.
I don't think it's as much a problem as some make it out to be, just use whichever has most of your apps. They're just tools in the end.
I've recently started doing a lot of resin 3D printing, and my printer came with Chitubox 1.9.4. But it's just a tar ball, and I have to execute it either via CLI or Nautilus... and that's a crappy user experience (it also uses Qt file-chooser on Gnome...
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