But not everyone agreed. , a young designer learning to code, was frustrated. "I just want to see my branches visually. Why is there no .deb file?"
For years, the rumor was that GitHub ignored the prairie. The official website only showed .exe and .dmg files. Community members tried to fill the gap. They created —brave volunteers who took the open-source code of GitHub Desktop and wrapped it into a .deb themselves. One was named Shiftkey , a legendary figure who maintained a personal apt repository. github desktop deb
One crisp morning, a change swept through the valley. , now under the banner of Microsoft, announced GitHub Desktop 3.0 . And hidden in the release notes, like a gem in a coal mine, was a single line: "Linux is now an officially supported platform. .deb and .rpm packages available." The prairie erupted. Lina rushed to the official GitHub releases page. There it was: GitHubDesktop-linux-x64-3.0.0.deb . But not everyone agreed
She downloaded it. No terminal commands (well, except sudo dpkg -i ). No sketchy third-party repositories. She double-clicked the file. The package manager (or GDebi ) opened, asking for her password. She typed it. A green progress bar filled. Why is there no