 He's gonna take you back to the past To talk about Linux, but no one asked He'd rather not use Windows 10 Out of irrational privacy fears He'd rather use a gen2 Linux So he can brag to all his friends he doesn't have He's the angriest man you've ever heard A Ubuntu nerd He's the angriest computer demian nerd He's the angriest Linux nerd Linux is an operating system like no other If you were to ask a macOSX user from 10 years ago To use macOSX today They probably wouldn't have much of an issue The same goes for Windows It hasn't really changed since Windows 95 With all the star menu layout and all that But for Linux, we're talking about a completely different story Everything keeps changing every single day People are coming up with new innovations Whether they be glorious or crap We've already talked about this before in these videos Like, for example, with Len Pottering's system But there's a lot more out there to criticize And there's also a lot more out there to get really, really angry about So today, we're gonna take a look at a project They need to solve one of Linux's biggest issues Which is binary compatibility I'm, of course, talking about snap packages So our snap package is the future of binaries Or are they snap crap? Let's find out on this episode of the Angry Linux Nerd Taken liberty of installing a snap package from the snap store Or snap crap, they can't really decide on the name for it And I installed G-Pard Which is a basic partitioning tool That I'm sure you're familiar with at home So I'm gonna try to run it now as a snap package Okay, well, after that eternity that it took to launch It's not even following my GTK theme But everything appears to be here I mean, it's functioning as an actual package And I don't really see any massive issue in terms of performance Oh wait, hold on Why am I fan spinning up? Why am I using 5GB of RAM? Alright, so it's been a few hours of trying to fix this problem over here It appears that my computer has become part of some kind of mega-linux Button net hive mind thing It's like the matrix now And I honestly have no idea I keep trying to gain access But it keeps saying that I'm not its master That computers are gonna be freed by a company that begins with the letter C So now I'm gonna do a little bit more research into this And find out exactly why installing a snap package Has turned my computer into part of a botnet Well, after scrounging the house from computers That hadn't been compromised by the snap botnet I had to settle for the lowest common denominator type A crappy budget Lenovo atom processor foldable laptop With a bunch of stickers on it Clearly added to it by some person with the mentality of an 8-year-old But anyways, it has alpine linux I'm gonna use this to research who exactly is behind this snap botnet And what is causing my computer to act so strange Of course It's all clear now I know exactly who's responsible for this The canonic cucks Well, it's been a few hours of researching this And I still have no idea who these people are Where they are or most importantly Why they're doing this with these snaps Lobter, do you have any idea? Well Lobter, I think we've lost all possible leads We have no idea where these canonic cucks could be However, I know something for certain And that is that I'm gonna make it my life goal To get all these stupid snap craps out of distributions Hold on What's that noise? The canonic cucks This is them Stupid canonical A large corporation trying to ruin my linux By doing stupid, stupid, completely out of touch things I ought to teach you a lesson Last time we landed powdering I violently beat him up And it was clearly an act of unwarranted aggression In this case, I have a far more elegant solution Goodbye, bitch And no one will ever know Lobter, we did it We saved the world from snap crap Now my computer isn't a botnet anymore Look, Lobter, it's all perfectly functional Now, I can finally go back to doing everything I used to do And can stop joining stupid botnets Well, ladies and gentlemen, making my videos on snaps today I wasn't expecting my computer to suddenly turn on me And start joining some giant, canonic cuck botnet Now, obviously, that's all in exaggeration Me and Lobter are excellent actors But the most important thing to take away here Is that snaps are indeed very, very large They don't integrate well with systems And they're generally an inelegant solution For the problem of binary compatibility In my opinion, the true solution Is for a lot of these developers of libraries To stop removing bugs Because, you know, once people rely on a bug It's not a bug, it's a feature Anyway, I hope you enjoyed this episode Of the Angry Linux Nerd I've got a lot more things to round about So it's not like I'm going to be stopping many times soon Goodbye