
Vincent Vermeulen wrote:Batmensch wrote:And thank god for MATE.
That would be Perberos you want to thankAnd the rest of the team that joined him of course.



refugee wrote:Unless you have the time and patients to deal with cinnamons multitude of bugs or really love bleeding edge, mate is the way to go. I tried cinnamon for a few weeks and while it looks and feels great, its still very beta and has poor support for Amd Radeon series cards as has been confirmed by many members. Cinnamon is the future but it has many months of bug hunting to go before its ready for primetime. At the end of the day I use my computer to work, and do not have the patients to deal with the random hard freezes and cpu spikes. Not knocking the mint team, what they are attempting to do is very complex but its just not ready for those who NEED stability above all else.


cwwgateway wrote:@fraze it is very true that many AMD/ATI graphics cards work great with Cinnamon, but there is a much larger problem with ATI graphcis support for linux than with other cards (intel and nvidia). It usually isn't specific to Cinnamon, but to 3d acceleration in general. I don't know exactly why, but it seems that the ATI drivers are not nearly as good as NVIDIA and Intel drivers. If the driver works well with your graphics card and it supports 3d acceleration, then cinnamon can be very stable (although occasionally there are glitches if you try to tweak stuff too much - it crashes when applet gschemas aren't installed correctly).


craig10x wrote:I was just curious..with the cinnamon desktop, is there an option to "auto hide" the lower panel, and if so, how do you do that?
Thanks...



richardsdma wrote:in my point of view, gnome-shell is the most beautiful DE in the market today, better and more intuitive than windows metro.


cinnamon --version



igor83 wrote:cwwgateway wrote:@fraze it is very true that many AMD/ATI graphics cards work great with Cinnamon, but there is a much larger problem with ATI graphcis support for linux than with other cards (intel and nvidia). It usually isn't specific to Cinnamon, but to 3d acceleration in general. I don't know exactly why, but it seems that the ATI drivers are not nearly as good as NVIDIA and Intel drivers. If the driver works well with your graphics card and it supports 3d acceleration, then cinnamon can be very stable (although occasionally there are glitches if you try to tweak stuff too much - it crashes when applet gschemas aren't installed correctly).
I have found this to be the case as well. ATI is persuading me to abandon AMD once and for all. I have been buying nothing but AMD since the 90's, but that will change now that I am getting into Linux. It is time to say good-bye to the siamese twin AMD & ATI, as one of the heads is diseased. I plan to embrace Intel's low-power offerings such as the 35W g630t. It may cost a little bit more but you get what you pay for. I don't see many posts by Linux users complaining about Intel or NVIDIA but there seems to be widespread difficulty with ATI and all of these gotchas for Linux users.

bwat47 wrote:Cinnamon all the way for m. The fact that it is based on the more modern GTK3/Gnome-shell base and that it has stable and well integrated compositing out of the box are huge plus's for me. MATE is alright if you don't want compositing or really want to use compiz, I just wish it was based on gnome 3 fallback instead of gnome 2.igor83 wrote:cwwgateway wrote:@fraze it is very true that many AMD/ATI graphics cards work great with Cinnamon, but there is a much larger problem with ATI graphcis support for linux than with other cards (intel and nvidia). It usually isn't specific to Cinnamon, but to 3d acceleration in general. I don't know exactly why, but it seems that the ATI drivers are not nearly as good as NVIDIA and Intel drivers. If the driver works well with your graphics card and it supports 3d acceleration, then cinnamon can be very stable (although occasionally there are glitches if you try to tweak stuff too much - it crashes when applet gschemas aren't installed correctly).
I have found this to be the case as well. ATI is persuading me to abandon AMD once and for all. I have been buying nothing but AMD since the 90's, but that will change now that I am getting into Linux. It is time to say good-bye to the siamese twin AMD & ATI, as one of the heads is diseased. I plan to embrace Intel's low-power offerings such as the 35W g630t. It may cost a little bit more but you get what you pay for. I don't see many posts by Linux users complaining about Intel or NVIDIA but there seems to be widespread difficulty with ATI and all of these gotchas for Linux users.
If you don't need a dedicated card, go intel without a doubt. Intel is the only one that officially develops proper open source drivers. Intel cards can be depended on to work great out of the box (although there does appear to be a bug with ubuntu 12.10/mint 14 where the intel driver isn't loaded correctly sometimes, but I haven't ran into it on either of my intel laptops). If you need a dedicated card, go nvidia but try to avoid optimus. I am so glad I no longer have to deal with AMD/ATI cards under linux. My old laptop had a mobility hd2600 and gave me nothing but trouble with both catalyst and the oss ati drivers. Its a shame because AMD/ATI has good video card hardware, its just the linux drivers that are terrible. I use an AMD card on my windows gaming pc and it works great, but I don't go near them if I intend to use linux on a machine.




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