
- #UBUNTU 17 DESKLETS MAC OS#
- #UBUNTU 17 DESKLETS INSTALL#
- #UBUNTU 17 DESKLETS UPDATE#
- #UBUNTU 17 DESKLETS FULL#
- #UBUNTU 17 DESKLETS SOFTWARE#
Live boot/install ISOs are available both in 32- and 64-bit flavours – a bonus as the main Ubuntu Bionic distribution switches to 64-bit ISOs only.
#UBUNTU 17 DESKLETS SOFTWARE#
For those who just can’t shake a Windows software addiction, switching is aided further by the inclusion of Wine, the Windows compatibility layer, by default.
#UBUNTU 17 DESKLETS MAC OS#
Cinnamon sports a user interface that will feel instantly familiar to those converting from Windows or Mac OS and as such, it’s a popular option for new Linux converts. You can download Cinnamon, MATE or Xfce versions, with Cinnamon providing the flagship Mint experience, now updated to release 3.8.

A ‘modern GNOME’ version of Mint is not distributed and for the first time with version 19, there is no KDE desktop either. In 2002, the Linux Mint team chose to fork GNOME Shell to create Cinnamon, an alternate desktop environment that – while not requiring GNOME itself to be installed – stayed true to the interface features users liked in GNOME Shell.
#UBUNTU 17 DESKLETS FULL#
Set of apps by default, including LibreOffice, Firefox, Thunderbird and GIMP, with the full set of over 30,000 packages from the Debian/Ubuntu base available for installation as required.
#UBUNTU 17 DESKLETS UPDATE#
“We’re able to communicate a very simple, yet honest message, which people will enjoy: Set your snapshots, you’re protected, go update everything.” Linux Mint 19 has fully adopted Timeshift, providing snapshots of the system for a quick and easy way to roll back changes.
#UBUNTU 17 DESKLETS INSTALL#
“In 19 we polished Flatpak support and the Software Manager, so you’ll be able to install apps just by clicking a link.” While Ubuntu releases are heavily promoting snaps, since version 18.3 Mint has made using Flatpak much easier, with no support for snaps. “i386 won’t last forever but we are able to support this in LTS without much effort, and that gives people the ability to use Mint in 32-bit until 2023.” The installation ISOs for Ubuntu 18.04 Bionic are only available in 64-bit flavours however 32-bit options are available for all Mint versions. We’re also very careful when it comes to collecting data, that’s a liability we don’t want.” “We don’t need this, so we don’t include it. Unlike Ubuntu 18.04 LTS, on which Linux Mint is based, version 19 doesn’t use ‘ubuntu-report’ to send back details about users’ systems. Clem sums it up perfectly: “A great release is a release everyone enjoys upgrading to”. The team want existing Mint users to continue to enjoy what they already enjoyed in the past, and they aim to meet their expectations by implementing new features, fixing issues and responding to their feedback. How does the team agree what goes into a new release? “When we work on Linux Mint, our goal is to keep doing better, so we have our existing users in mind,” Clem explains. The project gained significant traction – the reason that Linux Mint has grown hugely in popularity is that the development team listened to its loyal community following from the start, and have continued to do so. This experiment was well received, with new users offering up feature requests to augment Clem’s own ideas and improvements. When Linux Mint was first conceived, it took the form of a quick experimental distro containing feature ideas that the founder, Clement Lefebvre, had discussed in online reviews. Release dates for the distribution aren’t communicated or set in stone instead, a ‘when ready’ approach is adopted, with release announcements posted on the Linux Mint blog at. The release process for Mint has shifted over the years, but today the main Mint releases align with LTS releases of the Ubuntu base, with five years of support provided. Of Kubuntu as the code base was short-lived as the subsequent release, ‘Barbara’, switched to regular Ubuntu with GNOME as its desktop environment. Linux Mint first came to life well over ten years ago with the August 2006 release of ‘Ada’, version 1.0, based on Kubuntu 6.06. Paul O’Brien talks to Clement Lefebvre, the project leader of Linux Mint, as the popular distribution continues to mature and improve with a new release

All Linux Mint’s releases are supported for five years.

Linux Mint is based on the long-term releases of Ubuntu, with the 18.x versions underpinned by Xenial and version 19 using the latest Bionic base.
