Here is an indication that Mageia, just a few months old, is receiving press on a par with much older Linux distribution organizations:
From the desktoplinux.com site one may read: Recent meetings held among the RedHat, Fedora, Debian, Ubuntu, OpenSUSE, Mandriva, and Mageia communities has resulted in an informal agreement on an architecture for a common app installer API. Yet the dream of a universal GNU/Linux app-store may be much farther off. [...] http://www.desktoplinux.com/news/NS7312694782.html [...] From later in the story: Samuel Verschelde, a contributor to Mageia, the recent fork from Mandriva Linux, was quoted as saying that today's ease of use requirements demand the concept of applications rather than packages. In addition, he says, "Nowadays many graphical package managers lack translated descriptions, screenshots, and social interaction such as ratings and comments. As many distributions want the same thing, we tried to find a way to avoid unnecessary duplication of work." The article continues, discussing whether a common app store is possible. See the URL for the complete article. Ken
