A Big Bear Mint Review

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bigbearomaha
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A Big Bear Mint Review

Post by bigbearomaha »

I have now been playing with Mint from Bea through Bianca.

I have followed many of the posts in this forum watching this community develop.

my summary as is...

Linux Mint is a definite improvement over the Ubuntu base.

It's use of customized menus and config tools make the end user experience a more relaxed, productive experience, not having to struggle to find apps and not wonder where everything is on a barren desktop.

The method in which the Mint customizations are implemented add a distinct and unique personality to the distro, definitely not a "copycat" distro.

Solely as a distro, I rate Linux Mint a 4 out of 5. ( in case you wonder who I rate a 5, currently I have no fives, but Mint is one of the closest)

I don't look for just how many apps are available or how cool the desktop looks. Iprovide computers to many people and I have to be sure the end user can sit down to their PC and be functional with it.

Can they find their way around and find files.

Can they find the apps they want to use use either by name or category?

Does the overall appearance convey "current/modern/"with the times"?

I think Mint does all of these things very well.

While I applaud the release of a KDE version, I also think Mint should stay focused on Gnome.

The best products and companies are those who do one thing and do it better than everyone else.

Right now, I can't think of a better implementation of a Gnome based Linux than Mint. The more more the dev team diversifies and spreads itself out, the less fine point detail attention will be afforded to it's primary product. That's not picking on anyone, that's a reality of business.

The only difficulties that have been had involved updates, which were dealt with easily enough, and using other WM like KDE which isn't what Mint was made for to begin with, so problems were anticipated.

The Mint forums are growing, still small and comfy. The mod style is very open and not imperialistic.

On the average, the users are welcoming and forthcoming, if not a bit "fanboyish" but that is to be expected "at home" so no real concerns as they handle discussion of other distros very open-minded.

On the tech assistance side, responses could be a bit quicker, I'm not sure If it due to the lack of more mods to capably handle those questions or the sudden infusion of new users still building their knowledge enough to be able to answer all of the questions.

having said that, The answers provided are articulate, easy to follow and I have yet to see a comment along the lines of RTFM. very encouraging.

It's not entirely clear if Clem is the only dev or just the only one who makes himself so available. Either way, Clem should feel very good about the development of this distro and this community, hopefully, he can find a few more folks to "represent" on behalf of the team in the forums.

Keep up the solid work.

Big Bear
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clem
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Post by clem »

Waoo thanks :)

The updates are a real concern for me. I personally don't upgrade my personal computer ever... and I never experienced any problems. I've seen many people break their wifi with a kernel upgrade, their video driver with a X upgrade...etc etc... having said that, these upgrades come from the Ubuntu Security Updates repositories... so they also close backdoors and security holes and we can't just turn them off (or can we?).

This is something we're going to seriously think about for Cassandra. I hate to say that, but we'll need to make a choice between stability and security. Will we turn security updates by default or not? I really don't know and I'm very puzzled by that.

Clem
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Post by Boo »

First: great review big bear. :D

Second: stability or security ?

I think you are approaching this from the wrong angle.
If you are talking security you are talking security, there are no compromises for stability or ease of use. You choose a level of security you want to be at and stick with it.

To go to an extreme level of security you would have no network connections, IR or RF devices installed or active, and hard disk encryption etc.
Of course this makes the system not that usable in todays online world.

Stability is about bug fixes to existing programs. But like they say don't fix it if it aint broke. So if a distro is stable when released is there a need to update it? In the end programs are written by humans so there are bound to be errors.

Any way just some ramblings of a loooooony.

Boo
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Now where was i going? Oh yes, crazy!
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bigbearomaha
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Post by bigbearomaha »

This review is a reprint of the review put into the FBK newsletter for the local schools, community agencies, families etc, that FBK provides for in Omaha, NE and the surrounding area..

I posted it here just because I thought it fair to let you see what I say.

(it's also in our weekly newsletter thread on our new FBK google group)

Big Bear
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