I personally just don’t want to mess with “the core” of my PC
I like to install a lot of stuff from all around, and usually they all have these different dependencies that I might have to install separately… I use immutable because I want to know that I can purge any of that stuff easily without messing with anything else, because it’s all separated from each other.
An example on the windows side is a Tetramino stacking game called “DTET”. It’s so old that I had to install some runtime from Visual Basic 6 to run it. When I no longer need DTET, am I going to remember to remove it?
With immutable, I can just nuke whatever container I installed the program in if need be.
I personally just don’t want to mess with “the core” of my PC
I like to install a lot of stuff from all around, and usually they all have these different dependencies that I might have to install separately… I use immutable because I want to know that I can purge any of that stuff easily without messing with anything else, because it’s all separated from each other.
An example on the windows side is a Tetramino stacking game called “DTET”. It’s so old that I had to install some runtime from Visual Basic 6 to run it. When I no longer need DTET, am I going to remember to remove it?
With immutable, I can just nuke whatever container I installed the program in if need be.