Linux Mint Resources
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Announcements, notes, resources related to Linux Mint. Please use @linux_mint_users group for discussions.
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How to upgrade to Linux Mint 21.2
https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4550
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Mint Monthly News – July 2023

https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4554

Work started on LMDE 6 codenamed β€œFaye”.
Planning to release an EDGE ISO for Linux Mint 21.2. This ISO will feature a kernel 6.2.
Mint 21.3 is planned for Christmas 2023.
Aim to fix secureboot.
Will study the pros and cons of Wayland to assess the work needed in its potential adoption.
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Linux Mint Resources pinned Β«Smart Questions Wrong ways of asking a question: 1. Can I ask a question ? 2. Is there anyone who can help me ? 3. Are there any "XYZ" experts / pros around ? 4. Anyone expert in "XYZ" ? 5. I am facing an issue with "XYZ" Right way of asking a question…»
Mint Monthly News – October 2023

- Using the Romeo repository (only for testing)
- Changes to Hypnotix
- Work has started on Wayland, many things still missing
- Cinnamon 6.0, planned for Mint 21.3 this year, will feature experimental Wayland support

https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4591

Thanks to mintCast for the summary!
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Monthly News – November 2023

https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4604
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Monthly News - December 2023

https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4619

Linux Mint 21.3 - 15 remaining bugs to be tackled this week and preparations made for a stable release and an upgrade path.

LMDE 6 will receive all the new updates featured in Linux Mint 21.3.

New EDGE ISO for Linux Mint 21.3 shipping with a kernel 6.2.

Thanks to londoner of mintCast.org for the summary.
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Forwarded from IKess
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Mint Monthly News – February 2024
https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4650
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Mint Monthly News - April 2024
https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4675
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Mint Monthly News – May 2024
https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4719
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Mint Monthly News – June 2024
https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4728
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Mint Monthly News – July 2024

Linux Mint 22 is ready. The release will be announced this week. It will be followed by upgrade instructions for Linux Mint 21.3 and package backports for LMDE 6.
The BETA phase was very productive. We went through a total of 203 bug reports, it was intense.
https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4730

Thanks to mintcast.org for the updates.
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Linux Mint 22 β€œWilma” released!
https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4731
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Yes, this is a costly screw-up
Forwarded from Hacker News
There is no fix for Intel's crashing 13th/14th Gen CPUs – damage is permanent
Article, Comments
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Monthly News August 2024

https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4740

The repository servers were upgraded.
The upgrade between Mint 21.3 and 22 was broken last week due to package conflicts introduced upstream in Ubuntu 24.04 on samba and libreoffice. See blog for more details.
Outside of Linux Mint, Cinnamon looks pretty ugly. To address this problem Cinnamon 5.4 will ship with a much improved default theme.
Maintaining better APT libraries and utilities.
LMDE 5 β€œElsie” reached End Of Life and is no longer maintained.

Thanks to mintcast.org for the summary.
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Mint Monthly News – September 2024

Visual improvements in Cinnamon
+The new default theme is much darker and contrasted than before. Objects are rounded and a gap was introduced between the applets and the panel.
+The dialogs were redesigned. They’re nicely balanced and feature separated buttons.
+When an application is frozen and no longer responds Cinnamon shows a β€œForce Quit” dialog. This used to be a Gtk window. It was rewritten in Clutter to look like the rest of Cinnamon:
+The media-buttons OSD looks more modern and much cleaner than before, and so does the Workspace OSD.
+Also working on notifications, animations, the main menu, pkexec/logout dialogs, a new status applet…

+The transition towards Aptkit and Captain is now finished. Starting with Linux Mint 22.1, set to be released this December, none of our projects will depend on aptdaemon, synaptic, gdebi or apturl anymore.
No more translation issues. Everything is now fully translated.
No more bugs/papercuts. We no longer depend on unmaintained components which are upstream from us.
Redefined scope. Anything we didn’t need was removed, anything that was missing (purging packages, downgrading to specific packages etc..) was added.
+This allowed us to completely refactor the code in the Update Manager and greatly simplify its architecture
+In the Software Sources tool, the downgrading of foreign packages was performed via a VTE (an embedded terminal). This is now handled by Aptkit directly, with a nice progress dialog.

https://blog.linuxmint.com/?p=4749

Thanks to mintcast.org for the summary.
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