Flatpak seems to follow a similar path as many other Linux technologies like Wayland or Systemd, in the sense that they seem to arouse the anger of a small but very vocal crowd who really can't stand any challenge to the status quo. So this is the template of the story:<p>There is a new tool or workflow trying to replace or complement an old one. This new tool tries to solve many different complex problems that the old tool, usually designed decades ago, doesn't solve well in this the current world. To do so, obviously, some sort of compromise is required, the new tool won't do certain things that the old tool used to do, but in exchange of that it will do a lot of new things that many users really want. However this small crowd is really pissed by this, without understanding that there is no holly grail solution and some sort of compromise is always required. Additionally, as it's natural with any new technology, the very first incarnations of the new technology are not very mature and there is a lot to polish, a lot of tooling missing, and a chicken and egg problem of not enough users to drive its take off. And the small crowd will use all this as much as they can to try to prevent the world from moving on.<p>However, as time passes, the new tool starts becoming more mature, the obvious shortcomings get fixed, and all the new possibilities that the tool enables start to really shine. And while the initial compromise will always remain, the majority of users realize that the tradeoff was worth it.<p>This has happened with Systemd, it's starting to happen with Wayland, and I believe it will happen with Flatpak was well. We'll see.