

Wouldn't another option be to use the system package or is the version too old? Or use the Flatpak (or NIH-flatpak ), which is probably a better fit than AppImage for GUI programs that sit on top of a heavy toolkit. I'm on Ubuntu, and it looks like I need to upgrade to 22.04 before I can experience the build process for myself. ACP016000001 - Acroprint ETC Digital Automatic Time Clock with Stamp Office tools Acroprint ES900 Electronic Payroll Recorder/Time Stamp/Numbering. Ladybird: A truly new Web Browser comes to Linux The static linking makes the situation worse. > This is one of the "benefits" of go, where afaik many things are linked statically.

Then you'd use ldd to print the shared objects (shared libraries) required by each program or shared object: find … | xargs ldd. > Sure, but there might also be binaries outside the distro which link things statically, because makes distribution easier. Double click the downloaded executable and follow the prompts in the installer. Urgent Upcoming OpenSSL release patches critical vulnerability Download G19s-Imperial-Clock-Installer.exe from the latest release. Gcc-avr is a different package from the regular gcc: I don't know why it's an older version, you'll have to ask the Debian people.
