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Debian Linux

'Linux Mint Debian Edition' Begins Public Beta Testing (9to5linux.com) 22

This week saw the public beta-testing release of "Linux Mint Debian Edition". Besides listing download locations, its release notes also list out the project's three goals:

- Ensure Linux Mint would be able to continue to deliver the same user experience
- See how much work would be involved if Ubuntu was ever to disappear.
- Guarantee the software we develop is compatible outside of Ubuntu.

9to5Linux reports: Based on the Debian GNU/Linux 12 "Bookworm" operating system series, Linux Mint Debian Edition 6 is powered by the long-term supported Linux 6.1 LTS kernel series and features the latest Cinnamon 5.8 desktop environment that was introduced with the Linux Mint 21.2 "Victoria" release in July 2023⦠[T]his release comes with a new look and feel thanks to newly added folder icons with different color variants, improved consistency of tooltips to look the same across different apps and desktops, support for symbolic icons that adapt to their background, and full support for HEIF and AVIF

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'Linux Mint Debian Edition' Begins Public Beta Testing

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  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Saturday September 16, 2023 @06:23PM (#63853988)

    This is written as if "Linux Mint Debian Edition" isn't already a thing. But what they're actually referring to is just the beta release of version 6 of Linux Mint Debian Edition.

    Linux Mint Debian Edition 5, "Elsie", has been on their releases page [linuxmint.com] for quite some time. And, before that, version 4 was available, etc. etc.

  • If you write software that can only operate under Ubuntu then I'm not sure what is more broken, your software or Linux itself.

  • LMDE 5 (Score:4, Interesting)

    by eriks ( 31863 ) on Saturday September 16, 2023 @11:39PM (#63854446)

    I've been using LMDE 5 for a few months now as my primary desktop. I've used linux almost since there was linux, but never as my main desktop; always as servers or secondary machines, with a primary windows (or mac, long ago) desktop. Every flavor of Linux as a desktop I've tried (and I've tried most of them) has always had fiddly bits that got in my way more often than I liked, or just plain didn't work out for me, usually only in edge cases, but still, it was never quite there. I'm sure I could have gotten used to the warts, but I didn't have to, so I never stuck with it. Mint pretty much solves all that, for me at least, along with QEMU for the few things I still need windows for. It really is almost zero-config unless you're running leading-edge hardware (I had to install a newer kernel for full GPU and some sensor support, which was easy with a debian backport, though I still don't have fan speed data, but I'm living with that for now) or just want to mess with stuff, which I've done a ton of, but I think most users could switch and never care about windows again. I'm kind of surprised that people aren't switching from windows in droves now. I guess the inertia of windows is huge. Cinnamon isn't better than windows, in terms of functionality, but it's also not worse, which is good enough for me. Looking forward to upgrading to LMDE 6!

    • Mint pretty much solves all that...

      I really wanted to like Mint, but within ten minutes, I discovered that the desktop icons did not have a place to indicate a starting/default directory. That's a fundamental feature for all desktops, and is crucial for the business software I have written over the decades. I was able to manually edit the desktop icon file, but it made me wonder what other crucial functionality Mint didn't implement that would be a showstopper in the future.

      • by eriks ( 31863 )

        I see what you're saying, and I agree that's a deficit, but isn't an issue for me, and as you say, there's a workaround, but life in windows also often requires workarounds for pretty basic things, so at least for me, it's still not worse than windows. As long as the easy things are easy and the hard things are possible, I'm happy, especially if critical stuff doesn't randomly and annoyingly fall over, which for the most part is the case for my install at this point.

We are Microsoft. Unix is irrelevant. Openness is futile. Prepare to be assimilated.

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