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Linux Mint 17.1 Cinnamon and MATE Editions Released 89

linuxscreenshot writes The team is proud to announce the release of Linux Mint 17.1 'Rebecca' MATE. Linux Mint 17.1 is a long term support release which will be supported until 2019. It comes with updated software and brings refinements and many new features to make your desktop even more comfortable to use. Linux Mint 17.1 MATE edition comes with two window managers installed and configured by default: Marco (MATE's very own window manager, simple, fast and very stable); Compiz (an advanced compositing window manager which can do wonders if your hardware supports it). Among the various window managers available for Linux, Compiz is certainly the most impressive when it comes to desktop effects. Screenshots can be found here.
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Linux Mint 17.1 Cinnamon and MATE Editions Released

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  • Cinnamon and MATE (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Laz10 ( 708792 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @09:17AM (#48496869)

    Why is it that they keep having two so similar versions of Gnome? I can't really tell the difference.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Cinnamon is a bit more bleeding edge and fancy for users, plus will be receiving the benefit of improvements to GNOME/GTK going forward. MATE is a solid reliable workhorse for lower end machines that ran GNOME 2.32 without a problem but experience slowness when using GNOME 3/Cinnamon. From my perspective, choice is good. I've got Cinnamon on my newer machines and MATE on the older ones. Add to this that MATE looks the way Linux Mint has looked since the early days of the distro. Having the same consistent i

      • ...but experience slowness when using GNOME 3/Cinnamon.

        At least for Gnome 3 if you used one of the earlier versions and felt that it was slow then you should really try the latest version, preferrably 3.14. It's night and day difference between them. It's still not going to be great if your hardware is too old or too slow, but it's going to be better than before.

    • There are significant differences, in terms of usability, at least for me. With Mate, I can setup separate task bars at the top of each of my monitors and have only the windows that are present on that monitor appear in that task bar. This makes switching between many applications and windows much simpler and carefree. I wasn't able to figure out how to do this with Cinnamon, so I switched back to Mate and have been very happy with it.
  • Wait to upgrade (Score:5, Informative)

    by Pope Hagbard ( 3897945 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @09:17AM (#48496871) Journal

    If you're running Mint 17 now, the release notes say to wait a few more days until they release an updated upgrade manager.

    • I'm running Mint 17.0 now. Love it. Used to be a big Knoppix fan, but Knoppix has more and more problems with simple browsing and playing videos. Mint just works the way that it should, with no need to install anything extra (and the supposed installs for Knoppix are broken as far as I can tell). But I'm running this live disc the way that God intended, as a live disc, not as some damn installed system (actually running it on a broken laptop without a hard disk so there is no temptation to install it). If I
  • I'm running Mint 17 RC right now, due to a fat-finger where I was trying to install it in a separate partition and blew up my partition table. Rather that try to reinvigorate Windows 7, I just went ahead and installed it on the whole disk and - damn! It is really nice, Once I saw that youporn videos worked, I was sold! :-)
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Please change the update manager to suit granny-installations. I have installed Mint to a couple of computers as a replacement for Windows XP, whose users are complete newbies. On both cases I have instructed the users to periodically check, that the update manager's notifier icon is in green. Unfortunately this was a mistake, as the update manager will show the "Every update is installed, all ok" or similar tooltip, even if the updates have not been checked at all for ages. It seems that the user has to pr

    • How about you file a bug report instead of complaining here, where the maintainer's unlikely to see it?

      • Dear BMW,

        During cold weather the ignition timing on my car is out and makes is idle rough until I "reboot" it. I've replaced the cam and crank sensors, but it hasn't made a difference. It's not the MAF sensor, and when it's running rough my ODB reader says the ignition is retarded by about 10deg. I'm thinking of replacing the VANOS solenoids next, is this the correct course of action.

        ps. I also asked this question on http://forum.kerbalspaceprogra... [kerbalspaceprogram.com] but didn't get a reply, why not?

  • Cheers for Mint (Score:5, Interesting)

    by meta-monkey ( 321000 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @09:28AM (#48496963) Journal

    My wife's 83 year old grandmother was distraught because her computer was running so slow it would take five minutes to open a program. I told her I would come down and fix it for her, but it might require a wipe and reinstall, and she was fine with anything.

    It was a 5 year old HP running Vista, and I have never seen a computer so fucked in my entire life. There were viruses in her viruses. Toolbars, toolbars everywhere! I told her it was a lost cause and we needed to reinstall.

    Before I left home I burned a copy of Mint 17 Cinnamon. I had never used it before (I run Debian) but I had heard it was the simple, user-friendly Linux. I gave her two options, that she could reinstall Vista and eventually wind up right back here, or, I could install Linux Mint. I explained the free software ethos, in terms of both beer and speech, she got it, and said that's what she wanted. I installed it with no problem (except for the nouveau Nvidia drivers. They caused it to freeze up and I had to get the proprietary drivers instead), set everything up for her so she could get her gmail, web browse and skype. Her webcam worked right out of the box, too.

    I poked a hole in her firewall and set up vino so I could VNC in if she needed help. It's been three weeks and I haven't needed to once. She loves it and has had zero problems.

    Thank you, Mint team, for all your hard work. Thanks to you there's a new 83-year-old Linux h4xx0r.

    • Re:Cheers for Mint (Score:5, Interesting)

      by yelvington ( 8169 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @09:46AM (#48497107) Homepage

      Linux has been a great platform for the elderly for years.

      My mother, who also is in her 80s, bought a Toshiba Latitude in 2007. It came with Vista and not enough RAM to run anything other than Solitaire. I installed Ubuntu, which took about 15 minutes, and fixed the sound config, which took about two days, and she's been fine ever since.

      But her version of Ubuntu is no longer supported, and rather than try to upgrade -- she lives 12 hours away, so it's not exactly convenient -- we bought her a self-updating Chromebook on Black Friday. So far, so good, although she's going to have to switch to an HTML5 solitaire game instead of AisleRiot, which has been her go-to for the last seven years.

      I'm still running Ubuntu on my own laptop, but Cinnamon may lure me away. I need to upgrade, and I am not a fan of what Ubuntu has done to the UI.

      • Mint with Mate is very adequate to replace Ubuntu 8.04, 10.04 etc. and Mint Xfce likewise can replace seamlessly enough an old Xubuntu. (e.g. for one friend going from Xubuntu 8.04 to Mint 13 Xfce was about perfect)
        A nicety is support has been increased from 3 years to 5 years, that's entirely from the Ubuntu upstream.

      • Re:Cheers for Mint (Score:5, Interesting)

        by theskipper ( 461997 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:31AM (#48497529)

        Cinnamon was the antidote to the dumbed-down interface craze for me. Switched to it a year ago and haven't looked back.

        Nemo alone is worth the switch, it's a file manager that doesn't treat you like a child and "hide the knives" (and trees in the sidebar are intuitive to me, ymmv). Workspace management via panel, hotkeys or OSD all work well. The system menu is usable and makes sense. Applets are actually easy to install and manage. A couple clicks and sane scrollbars are back. And simple things out of the box like being able to resize a window without the idiocy of trying to hit a single pixel in the lower right corner reflects the productivity mindset it targets.

        Maybe all this has been fixed in Unity/Gnome 3/etc. but I haven't paid attention and don't care at this point. Sure there's still bugs and features that need polishing but imho it's worth setting up a vm to test it out.

    • explained the free software ethos, in terms of both beer and speech, she got it, and said that's what she wanted. I installed it with no problem (except for the nouveau Nvidia drivers. They caused it to freeze up and I had to get the proprietary drivers instead), set everything up for her so she could get her gmail, web browse and skype. Her webcam worked right out of the box, too.

      I poked a hole in her firewall and set up vino so I could VNC in if she needed help. It's been three weeks and I haven't needed to once. She loves it and has had zero problems.

      Thank you, Mint team, for all your hard work. Thanks to you there's a new 83-year-old Linux h4xx0r.

      I did basically the same thing for my wife. After seeing that she hadn't used her touchscreen laptop for over a week, I asked why. She was just so fed up with W8.1 that she stopped using it. W8 was forcing updates, destabilizing the machine, and she had been annoyed with it's operation in general. So she just stopped using it

      So I installed Mint 17 on it, explaining that I'd never done a touchscreen computer in Linux before. Worked great, and now she's happily doing everything like a Boss. Only problem is

      • So does the touchscreen work if you install Linux? Or does it just use the keyboard & mouse?
        • So does the touchscreen work if you install Linux? Or does it just use the keyboard & mouse?

          Touchscreen works great. It seems a little strange at first using touchsceen for normal looking menus instead of the big icons like W8, but yes, everything functions perfectly. Right clicks of course need the touchpad. But she gets around with no problems at all.

        • I installed Centos 7 on a Lenovo Ideapad laptop a few months back and to my surprise the touchscreen worked just fine. I discovered that by accident when I was polishing a speck of dirt off of the screen and the cursor was following my cleaning tissue.

    • It was a 5 year old HP running Vista, and I have never seen a computer so fucked in my entire life. There were viruses in her viruses. Toolbars, toolbars everywhere! I told her it was a lost cause and we needed to reinstall.

      My father's solution for this was buying a new Dell box every other year for $500 USD or less. Those "old" boxes became my FreeNAS file server over the years. I kept telling him to stay away from the naughty bits, but of course he never does.

  • Cinnamon on RHEL7 (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Rob Riggs ( 6418 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:06AM (#48497263) Homepage Journal

    I've been a Red Hat/RHEL/CentOS/Fedora user for a *very* long time. I've been trying to use Gnome Shell since Gnome3 came out, so I have given it more than a fair shake. This past month I was testing RHEL7 for desktop upgrades at work and found that Gnome Shell is way too much of a distraction. So, at home I switched my desktop to Cinnamon. Holy Cow! I have a usable desktop again. I found Cinnamon in EPEL7 and installed that at work. It is so much more usable on RHEL7. This is what we will be rolling out as the default desktop firm-wide when we upgrade.

    So -- a big *Thank You* to the Linux Mint team for making Cinnamon,

    • Re:Cinnamon on RHEL7 (Score:5, Informative)

      by RabidReindeer ( 2625839 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @10:42AM (#48497651)

      You were more forgiving than I was. Gnome3 was pretty much the Poster Child for the Grinch paradigm of software design that's become so prevalent these days. As in, "Here's our new, wonderful product. Isn't it wonderful? Don't you just love it? What do you mean it doesn't do something essential that you've been able to do for years and you don't like it? You ingrate! You're GOING to like our new product! We're not going to fix it just because you and 100,000 whiny little dweebs claim to need those missing functions!"

      So I switched to Cinnamon and have been perfectly happy ever since. I've even kept some of the Gnome3-like options turned on. But I have all those little bits of clutter that keep me attuned to systems operation that Gnome 3 took away from me.

      • "Grinch paradigm"...I like that. Soooo fucking prevalent. What the hell happened to cause this??

        • Re:Cinnamon on RHEL7 (Score:4, Interesting)

          by RabidReindeer ( 2625839 ) on Monday December 01, 2014 @04:47PM (#48501377)

          Back in the time of Fairies and Unicorns, every software release was a visit from Santa Claus. Each new release was more wonderful and feature-laden than the one before.

          Then came Windows 2000. This was when it all changed, I think. ET began to "phone home" via the Internet, the software license keys weren't just something that you could type in - now they had to be "real" keys. And Microsoft decided that they would be selective about what multi-media formats they supported. As in, if they didn't "own" it, they wouldn't support it. The Grinch was beginning to appear.

          But the happy little penguins played on, and each new Linux release was Christmas.

          Until certain developers decided that they "knew" what was best for the unwashed masses. One of the first examples was when Nautilus lost one of its most popular window display options. That caused a mighty uproar, to the point where after many futile attempts to persuade the masses, a solution was presented that more or less restored what the Grinch had taken.

          Gnome3 brought the Grinch out into the open. Yes, it was a cleaner, more dynamic display. It was certainly prettier. But some of us aren't using our computers to look good, we're using them to (allegedly) be productive. And the Gnome3 Grinch stole our applets.

          As usual, the apologists had all sorts of excuses why I was wrong not to be properly awed. But all those grody little applets served very important purposes. Since they were in the margins of the display, they couldn't be covered up by sliding windows. They were always visible from every desktop. And this was important because when the machine went South, it was often the case that the reason could be seen from those applets even though the display was too paralyzed to permit switching to another desktop or launching a diagnostic app.

          Which is why I'm now a happy little Cinnamon user. It gave me my applets back. And, from what I can see, it's actually a lot easier to write Cinnamon applets than it ever was to write Gnome applets, should I be so inclined.

          But the Grinch is still creeping around. Gnome3 fixed a lot of the things that offended people, but as far as I know, the applets weren't among them. And now we have systemd playing Grinch as well. What's next? I shudder to think, but I may drop my longstanding relationship with Red Hat for Debian if systemd is going to stay the way it is.

          I whine. I complain loudly. But given a choice, I also vote with my feet. Which is why I'm running Cinnamon.

  • And yet... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Despite a lot of hand-waving initially from the Mint folks about not containing the same "spyware" that Ubuntu does (i.e.the Dash Lens that submitted searches to Amazon, which incidentally had a rather obvious "switch" to turn it off), they still won't explain exactly what their "Mint Search Enhancer" extension for Firefox actually -does-...nor is the source provided for it anywhere by the people behind Mint. They offer a vague suggestion that you can e-mail a request for the source for any package on the w

    • So just disable the extension and add a normal Google search or whatever to the browser. I don't like it when people try to get all smart and move away from a standard, the-same-for-everybody, not-trying-to-personalize-my-results search either, but come on.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Absolutely. You can disable it. You can't remove it without removing the core meta package for the desktop, on the other hand. Contrast that with Ubuntu...apt-get remove xul-ext-ubufox. Removes the extension and nothing else. Oh yeah, and the source for the extension is still readily available.

        Yes you can disable it. No, it doesn't really explain why the people behind Linux Mint are purposefully being obscure about what the extension does, nor does it explain why the source code for the extension isn't read

    • by Rob Y. ( 110975 )

      You can disable it. Not as obviously easy as it could be (but then again, that's how Mint pays to keep the lights on). But if you don't agree with the way their 'enhancing' search for you, you can switch to standard Google search - or anything else firefox supports. Or install Chromium or Chrome from the Mint repository.

  • Then I don't want it.

    grumpycat.jpg

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