You can convert some installation packages (like. The ".rpm" file will not install into Linux Mint without converting it. As was already mentioned, you could try downloading the "rpm" file, or the archive file "tarball" (.tar file) and installing it that way which might work, and it might not. It seems this program "Kstreamripper" is not being maintained regularly. ![]() I just read your post and the good reply to it. Hint: I never use software recommendations from blogs. That's a while ago, and I wouldn't touch it. The reason you have to install kstreamripper that way is that it used to be in the repos but hasn't since ubuntu 10. I may do that in the future if I need HEVC video capability but not yet. I will not use them unless there's something newer I can't do without. ![]() I have 2 mint 17 installs and there are no tar file installs or external untested ppa's. If you don't know how this works I'd recommend avoiding them, period. ![]() BTW none of those things are beta tested for your release version like the apps in the repos. Unlike when you use apt-get or deb files, installing from tar files leave this to you. It's common to have missing dependencies when installing from tar.bz2 files if you don't know enough to install the dependencies first. Why are you trying to install rpm versions? That's for distros (Fedora based largely) that use a different package management system than debian/ubuntu.
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