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Linux Mint 19 'Tara' Released (betanews.com)

Linux Mint, the maker of popular Linux distro, announced on Friday the general availability of a new version of their operating system. Called Linux Mint 19 "Tara", the new version offers a range of new features, improvements, and a promise that it would stick around for a while. Writing for BetaNews, Brian Fagioli: The most significant aspect of Linux Mint 19 is the new Ubuntu 18.04 LTS base. Tara will receive updates until 2023 -- very impressive. The kernel is at 4.15, and all three desktop environments are being updated too. Mate is now at version 1.2, Cinnamon gets bumped up to 3.8, and Xfce is updated to 4.12.

In Linux Mint 19, the star of the show is Timeshift, said, Clement Lefebvre, Linux Mint Project Leader. Although it was introduced in Linux Mint 18.3 and backported to all Linux Mint releases, it is now at the center of Linux Mint's update strategy and communication, he added. Thanks to Timeshift you can go back in time and restore your computer to the last functional system snapshot. If anything breaks, you can go back to the previous snapshot and it's as if the problem never happened.

4 of 75 comments (clear)

  1. Re:No KDE edition by SeaFox · · Score: 4, Insightful

    KDE Mint feels kinda redundant to me when you have Kubuntu and KDE's own Neon. Why do we need a KDE version of a distro that is a derivative of another distro that is a derivative of Debian? So we can play more games of point the fingers when something doesn't work right?

  2. Re:Dare I dream by Mkkby · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Tried mint on my desktop and laptop. Neither hibernate/suspend correctly. Microsoft has nailed this since 2000. So frustrating.

    It would be nice if they worked on getting the basics right after all these years. Until then linux will remain a minor player for consumers. The chicken and egg never seem to hatch. Need to fix the basics in order to drive market share in order to get driver/OEM support.

  3. So its System Restore then? by hairyfeet · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Cuz that is exactly what it sounds like, the system takes snapshots and then if an update or anything else borks it you can restore it to a point in time when it was working.

    If that is the case then Kudos to the Mint team, I've been saying for years that if you want Linux to be usable to the masses its gonna have to be a hell of a lot easier for Joe and Jane Average to take care of basic tasks without having to read Man pages and learn CLI voodoo and having their own version of system restore is a good step in the right direction.

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  4. Re:why mint over parent Ubuntu or Debian by Tyger-ZA · · Score: 3, Insightful

    you don't need mint to avoid a 'bullshit ui' from ubuntu. you just like slamming canonical, i guess.

    because all that's needed is 4 or 5 brain cells to power yourself to configuring something else on it.. including your precious mint's default of cinnamon.

    Let's break it down:

    you just like slamming canonical, i guess.

    It's easier to install 3rd party software on Ubuntu than it is on Debian.

    Indeed.

    because all that's needed is 4 or 5 brain cells to power yourself

    Perhaps you should have engaged your 4 or 5 remaining brain cells before replying? I've used Ubuntu from around 5.10 up to and including when they introduced Unity. Tried to like it, gave up, moved on. But Unity was so awesome that they didn't cancel it, amirite?

    to configuring something else on it.. including your precious mint's default of cinnamon.

    Do more work to achieve the same thing, why?

    And what would I gain from doing it that way anyway?

    Canonical deserves to be called out for fucking up the UI, just like one would call out MS for fucking up the UI