Linux Mint Debian Edition 6 was officially released today, though the ISO was pushed out to the servers starting Monday. I've been running the Beta since the 11th, which had a problem with the installer (it got hung up in the shutdown from the live session), but otherwise it's been flawless. I'd written some bash scripts to set up my wifi and VPN, remove apps and fonts I didn't want, install the apps I did want, wire the home directories to a shared partition, etc., and while I intended to import my Cinnamon settings from 21.2, I recreated my preferred layout by hand. (
Screenshot on Twitter.) I haven't reinstalled everything yet, like Wine, but otherwise it's the Mint I've been using for the last four-plus years, just Debian-powered.
There are a few minor differences from Mint 21.2 -- one of the Cinnamon applets I use there isn't available for LMDE, but I found a better substitute; GNOME Terminal doesn't have the transparency option, because Ubuntu patches their version of it to enable it -- but nothing crucial for me. Memory footprint is a little heavier at idle, but the system feels a tad sprightlier.
I'm still going to do a clean reinstall of my 21.2 partition when 21.3 comes out at the end of the year. Do stuff to it, mess it up.
So my Windows 10 changed how it handles photos recently. It changed from the original Win10 photo viewer to this new version without asking. It refuses to rotate between pre-selected images, has the gallery at the bottom, closes with the ESC key. A total pile of garbage.
Yup. I [REDACTED]
hate it. I thought I was spared it at work, but that update was pushed out in the last two or three days and I had to deal with it at work today. The floating filmstrip bar is the
worst; there's gotta be a way to permanently disable the damn thing. (I haven't delved too deeply. Don't want to wake the Balrog...)