It’s common on Ubuntu/Debian. They’re stable releases, plus there are repos for them all over the place. This unfortunatelly leads to dependency hell, sooner or later. If you use only the provided repos, that will most likely never happen.
If I use the provided repos, the software is no longer compatible - the .deb conflicts with the packages in the main repos.
Compare it to Windows, where I don’t need to explain to my boss why installing a tool everyone uses made me have to go away for 2 hours. I just download the .exe and I don’t ever care about a “DLL conflict” from any repos whatsoever.
It’s common on Ubuntu/Debian. They’re stable releases, plus there are repos for them all over the place. This unfortunatelly leads to dependency hell, sooner or later. If you use only the provided repos, that will most likely never happen.
If I use the provided repos, the software is no longer compatible - the .deb conflicts with the packages in the main repos.
Compare it to Windows, where I don’t need to explain to my boss why installing a tool everyone uses made me have to go away for 2 hours. I just download the .exe and I don’t ever care about a “DLL conflict” from any repos whatsoever.