Keep in mind, I don't have any experience creating Linux programs, so
I bowing to everyone's superior knowledge here.

Here's a question that I've been wondering about for a while now, and
it concerns installing new programs.  It seems there are three
different types of new programs/apps.

1)  Compiled from source.

2)  A regular install similar to Win/Mac with something like an
install shield helping with the dirty work (choose directory, copying
files from CD, etc.) like Inherit The Earth does.

3)  Plain executable files.  Zaxxon Retro Remake falls in this
category.  You download the tarball, unzip it, and then click on the
executable, and you're reliving the fun of the old arcades.

My question is this -- what are the advantages and disadvantages of
each of these systems?  What makes people pick one over the others?
I'm guessing that with Zaxxon, the file is so small and the
application so limited (it is just a game, after all), there's no need
for any fancy stuff, while the other two can configure themselves to
how you have your file system and networks set up and such.
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