Summary

  • Experimental wayland support is introduced which turns out to already well developed but still has some rough edges (no support for gestures, portal/polkit malfunctioning and missing wayland protocols), see video for more details.
  • Updates to all core Mint apps and introduces an unstable repository nicknamed “Romeo” in the Sources apps for those who want to test out the latest versions of programs.
  • Various QOL improvements for Mint apps such as bulk renamer and warpinator.
  • Introduces “Actions” which are context menu buttons that can be customized in the Nemo file manager.
  • New gestures such as zoom and increased customization.

This update does not change Linux Mint 21.X significantly, but it does set the foundations for an exciting 2024 for the Mint team as they work to rebase Linux Mint 22 on the future Ubuntu LTS 24.04 coming this April. Of which, like Debian 12 last year, will be a massive update and hype train.


Sources:

  1. Linux Mint 21.3 “Virginia” released!
  2. New Features in 21.3
  3. Invidious Redirect Link

“So what are you still doing with Windows? Switch to Linux Mint!”

  • AssortedBiscuits [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    8 months ago

    One way to tell the difference is to use a distro that doesn’t have a desktop environment like Bunsenlabs. Bunsenlabs doesn’t have a DE, but it uses a windows manager called Openbox. The menu and the theme of the windows is controlled by Openbox, the panel at the bottom is Tint2, the file manager is Thunar, the application that controls the desktop wallpaper is Nitrogen, and the display at the top right is Conky. All of these applications are independent applications with independent developers, meaning they aren’t really designed with each other in mind. Nothing’s stopping you from replacing Openbox with a tiling manager like i3 but keeping everything else the same. It’s for this reason that Bunsenlabs doesn’t have an actual DE.

    In sharp contrast, for something like Gnome or KDE Plasma, the suite of applications that form the DE are very much designed to work with each other. You don’t have to stick with the default applications and some DE’s like xfce are designed to be modular like that, but it’s a pretty janky experience. For a while, I had an xfce DE except that I used Cinnamon’s file manager Nemo instead. But since Nemo was designed to work in the context of the Cinnamon DE, there were certain features that Nemo should be capable of but I was unable to use because I was using xfce instead of Cinnamon.