Funny enough when I update through Linux and don’t pay attention to whether Firefox is included I’ll have Firefox refuse to open any new tabs because its files got overwritten while it’s running. At that point it forces you to restart which I guess is better than just crashing.
Idk about your is. Fedora sends me notifications to update and prompts to do so on shutdown.
The problem is that traditionally, Linux distro didn’t just update the OS, but also applications like libre office. So you couldn’t download an is update without updating your apps, which you might not want to always do
Idk about your is. Fedora sends me notifications to update and prompts to do so on shutdown.
The problem is that traditionally, Linux distro didn’t just update the OS, but also applications like libre office. So you couldn’t download an is update without updating your apps, which you might not want to always do
Same as OSs, but with Linux you choose when to update. Why would be browsers different?
Funny enough when I update through Linux and don’t pay attention to whether Firefox is included I’ll have Firefox refuse to open any new tabs because its files got overwritten while it’s running. At that point it forces you to restart which I guess is better than just crashing.
Idk about your is. Fedora sends me notifications to update and prompts to do so on shutdown.
The problem is that traditionally, Linux distro didn’t just update the OS, but also applications like libre office. So you couldn’t download an is update without updating your apps, which you might not want to always do
Idk about your is. Fedora sends me notifications to update and prompts to do so on shutdown.
The problem is that traditionally, Linux distro didn’t just update the OS, but also applications like libre office. So you couldn’t download an is update without updating your apps, which you might not want to always do