Unofficial TikTok downloads surge in the US
Unofficial TikTok downloads surge in the US
Many people are turning to so-called "sideloading" because the app is unavailable on official stores.
cross-posted from: https://rss.ponder.cat/post/109565
Unofficial TikTok downloads surge in the US
Many people are turning to so-called "sideloading" because the app is unavailable on official stores.
cross-posted from: https://rss.ponder.cat/post/109565
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"Sideloading" isn't an actual thing. It's a word the industry made up to make installing your own software sound dangerous.
All traditional Windows applications were "sideloaded" and back then it was just fucking called installing an application.
Prior to the bullshit ass Microsoft Store, sideloading was literally the only way to get shit on Windows.
Linux also always allowed you to install applications directly. Everyone just uses package management software at this point because it's all well managed and easier to keep things updated, but you can still install things manually with make.
If this leads more people to understand that "sideloading" is some contrived boogeyman bullshit for just being allowed to install what you want on the device you fucking own that's a good thing.
As a traditional Mac user I also “side loaded” applications
As a recent modern Mac user, this experience is so bizarre and is always a little different.
I grew up on macs (thanks mom) and built a PC as soon as I had my first real job in highschool. I recently bought a MacBook for the promise of battery life and cool running. If only it was easier to get my arm windows laptop to boot Linux...
Back in the 80s and 90s it was a lot like installing software on Windows except you’d drag the application to where you wanted it instead of doing a:\setup.exe
Linux also always allowed you to install applications directly. Everyone just uses package management software at this point because it's all well managed and easier to keep things updated, but you can still install things manually with make.
You only need make if you're compiling. Installating precompiled software is somewhat easier, since it's basically just copying to /bin. If you know where that is, then it's simple.
make install typically also handles copying things like libraries, shared assets, and docs as needed, but yeah precompiled software is usually a tar... or loading a downloaded package file into the package manager.
There's even .deb, .rpm, flakes, whatever pacman uses, … that are just package files that copy to /bin/ for you, like .apk/.ipas.
Sideloading doesn't sound dangerous, if anything it sounds cool lol
It sounds cool because it sounds dangerous
I guess you've convinced me to sideload and smoke cigarettes.
I'm going to be so fucking cool.
Hell yeah. Lemme put on my hacker glasses and sideload some shit.
It's a word the industry made up to make installing your own software sound dangerous.
[citation needed]
Prior to the bullshit ass Microsoft Store, sideloading was literally the only way to get shit on Windows.
Yeah, I mean that made sense when it was the only way. There was no need to differentiate. That's not the case anymore.
The term "sideloading" has been around since the 90s. Source: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sideloading
The term "sideload" was coined in the late 1990s by online storage service i-drive as an alternative means of transferring and storing computer files virtually instead of physically.
Sounds like it was something very different back then...
ulrich!
now you are lars ulrich. How many ulrichs can you be?
Oh merde! You caught me!
Whew...
Lotta words for a semantics quibble that amounts to a distinction without a difference... 🤷♂️