… because official vscode binaries are proprietary, released under EULA and include tracking components
official vscode(oss) binaries still have tracking, they’re not properly configured and come without any marketplace. (arch ships a config file with openvsix though)
vscodium comes without tracking and pre-configured with openvsix marketplace, and also provides it’s own branding.
There’s the base vs code source code, which microsoft takes, adds a bunch of tracking, compiles it, and distributes that binary. If you compiled vs code yourself from source, you would not get the same executable.
A bit like chrome, because i’m pretty sure chrome isn’t open source, chromium is. Could be wrong on that.
i always end up just going back to vscodium.
liked Helix quite a lot more but still switched back after a while
Neovim plugin+vscodium/vscode are great
@vox @Kinglink why not vscode?
… because official vscode binaries are proprietary, released under EULA and include tracking components
official vscode(oss) binaries still have tracking, they’re not properly configured and come without any marketplace. (arch ships a config file with openvsix though)
vscodium comes without tracking and pre-configured with openvsix marketplace, and also provides it’s own branding.
@vox really!! I thought that vscode open source
yes, but vscode’s source code is still released under an open-source license. (that’s what vscodium and code-oss are built from)
There’s the base vs code source code, which microsoft takes, adds a bunch of tracking, compiles it, and distributes that binary. If you compiled vs code yourself from source, you would not get the same executable.
A bit like chrome, because i’m pretty sure chrome isn’t open source, chromium is. Could be wrong on that.