In many case, but in the situations I'm talking about here is really a lot more cumbersome to use. To use the command line to install a a package from a website, I have to
- Right-click
- Select Save Link As
- Enter filename/directory
- Open a terminal
- Remember where I put the bloody file
- Run yum to actually install it.
yum (and rpm) can install from the web
1. Right-click 2. Copy link location 3. yum install <paste link location>
Compare that to
- Click on the link
- Hey, there's no step 2.
The 2nd variant is something that's was working for about 15 years, but I guess that was before someone decided to make the system "user friendly"...
Without getting emotional about it you need to think what happens when you click on a link in a web browser, i.e. how does the browser know to install this link you've just clicked on and what does it have to do in order to install it. Personally, I think having RPMs installable with a single click is a bad idea - they are as dangerous as .exe on Windows systems. Having said that, on my Fedora system clicking on an RPM downloads it (with a warnning), then double clicking on the downloaded RPM in the browser launches "Gnome Software" to install it: no terminals involved and you never have to take your hand off the mouse.
Things may be different if you aren't using Gnome or it may be different for another browser.
P.