Based on the most recent edition of Ubuntu, Linux Mint adds a layer of user-friendliness
Linux Mint - Making Linux easy
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Based on the most recent edition of Ubuntu, Linux Mint adds a layer of user-friendliness
Linux Mint 8 also simplifies the desktop by doing away with the dual-menubar layout preferred by Ubuntu in favour of a single menubar across the bottom of the screen. Mint also trims down the tripartite Applications/Places/System menu of Ubuntu and condenses this into a single Main Menu flyout. This adds a layer of simplicity to the Mint desktop and mimics the style of the Windows desktop, with which most users are familiar.
If you don't like Mint's menu, just remove it from the bar and add the default gnome menu back which is what you essentially have in Ubuntu.
Personally I like GnoMenu (which is what Mint uses to get that menu), you can have it look like XP, Win7, Vista, Kde or whichever menu you really like, and that is basically why I like it.
Heck, all I know about UNIX/Linux is a tiny smattering of AIX and that's nothing. Always been Micro$oft-based. How would anyone recommend this Linux Mint to a total newcomer to the OS? ... Where can I source recommendations?
I tried Mint not too long ago, but wasn't too impressed with it. Maybe one gets attached to a particular distro and how things are done![]()
I've given many distros a chance on my PCs, but Mint stayed the longest. My daughter (8) uses it, so it can't be all bad.![]()