The team is proud to announce the release of Linux Mint 12 “Lisa” RC.


Linux Mint 12 “Lisa” RC

New features at a glance:

For a complete overview and to see screenshots of the new features, visit: “What’s new in Linux Mint 12“.

Known problems:

  • MATE
  • Nautilus actions
  • Adding PPA repositories
  • Apturl and apt://
  • Moonlight
  • Upstream issues

To get more information about these problems and their solution, read the “Known problems” section of the release notes.

System requirements:

  • x86 processor (Linux Mint 64-bit requires a 64-bit processor. Linux Mint 32-bit works on both 32-bit and 64-bit processors).
  • 512 MB RAM (1GB recommended for a comfortable usage).
  • 5 GB of disk space
  • Graphics card capable of 800×600 resolution
  • CD/DVD drive or USB port

Bug reports:

Please report any bug you may find in Launchpad.

Download:

Md5 sum:

  • CD no codecs 32-bit: 3dd08ce9e7efcedbce236293ef44cdb6
  • CD no codecs 64-bit: 8c24c67f93d9aff9c50fdbd2924602c2
  • DVD 32-bit: 30654eac57bcf8210c8360d3b149b204
  • DVD 64-bit: 3f5667e38f3090b1cd226c47fcbc934a

Torrents:

HTTP Mirrors for the 32-bit CD No codecs ISO:

HTTP Mirrors for the 64-bit CD No codecs ISO:

HTTP Mirrors for the 32-bit DVD ISO:

HTTP Mirrors for the 64-bit DVD ISO:

Enjoy!

We look forward to receiving your feedback. Thank you for using Linux Mint and have a lot of fun testing the release candidate!

Donations & Sponsorships:

Many thanks to the following donors and sponsors for financially supporting Linux Mint:

Donors:

  • $700 (5th donation), Ian M. aka “bcc4foss
  • $314.15, Andrew Coristine
  • $205 (2nd donation), Internet Beacon
  • $160 (2nd donation), Jim D. aka “jajodo”
  • $100 (6th donation), Jordan S.
  • $100 (6th donation), Gregor M.
  • $100 (3rd donation), Drazen P.
  • $100 (2nd donation), Steve Hoffman aka “SteveHoffmanUK”
  • $100, Gregory P.
  • $100, Robert C.
  • $67.64, Dirk K.
  • $67.64, Douglas L.
  • $67.63, Joachim M.
  • $67.56, Quim aka “slackjp”
  • $64.75 (2nd donation), Jean-Paul Genette
  • $64.75, Uwe U.
  • $60 (4th donation), Darrel Norstrom aka “Darrel”
  • $54.39, Nikolaj P.
  • $54.11 (7th donation), Pasi K.
  • $54.11, Durand F.
  • $50 (25th donation), Slavoljub aka “slw”
  • $50 (10th donation), JBHoren
  • $50 (8th donation), Tsuguo S.
  • $50 (7th donation), Andreas S. aka “Unforgiving67
  • $50 (7th donation), Tsuguo S.
  • $50 (6th donation), Tsuguo S.
  • $50 (4th donation), Richard H.
  • $50 (3rd donation), V. Mark Lehky aka “SiKing
  • $50 (2nd donation), Alan H.
  • $50 (2nd donation), Mark S.
  • $50, DJ Conde
  • $50, Robert M.
  • $50, James D.
  • $50, David P.
  • $50, Edie M.
  • $50, Einnar aka “einnar”
  • $50, Chris R.
  • $50, Ken de Montigny
  • $50, Joel T.
  • $50, Frederick M.
  • $40.58 (3rd donation), Lorenz F.
  • $40.58, Jorge D.
  • $40.53, Inigo X. C.
  • $38.85 (6th donation), Wolfgang P.
  • $33.82, Gregor K.
  • $33.78, Matthias H.
  • $32.38 (3rd donation), MartinF aka “badwolf9
  • $30, Jason G.
  • $30, jmro3006
  • $27.06 (25th donation), Manuel F.
  • $27.06 (2nd donation), Jens-uwe R.
  • $27.06, Thomas H.
  • $27.06, Darth
  • $27.06, Eric C.
  • $25.9 (20th donation), Olli K.
  • $25.9 (2nd donation), Ron D.
  • $25.9, Michel B.
  • $25.9, Victor J. J. J.
  • $25.9, Rita M.
  • $25.9, Stephen C.
  • $25 (3rd donation), Kent K.
  • $25 (3rd donation), Adam D.
  • $25 (2nd donation), Marcus K. aka “TH3B4R0N
  • $25, Jude N.
  • $25, Darin S.
  • $25, Len J.
  • $25, Internet Beacon
  • $25, Christian T.
  • $25, David L. aka “lebel
  • $25, Tim B.
  • $25, Ricky B.
  • $20 (5th donation), Phillip H.
  • $20 (4th donation), Richard G. aka “Trollboy”
  • $20 (3rd donation), Eduardo O.
  • $20 (2nd donation), Paul C
  • $20 (2nd donation), Simon N.
  • $20 (2nd donation), Denis L.
  • $20 (2nd donation), Earl Dukerschein aka “Bitflogger
  • $20, Wayne A.
  • $20, Michael E.
  • $20, Kazuyoshi K.
  • $20, Larry H. J.
  • $20, Erin Z.
  • $20, David S
  • $20, David R.
  • $20, Timofey T.
  • $20, Erin Z.
  • $20, Larry B.
  • $20, Oddgeir K.
  • $20, Jonathan H.
  • $20, Ernie H.
  • $20, Mostafa
  • $20, Ryan M.
  • $20, Patrick H.
  • $20, Juan M.
  • $20, Sergey S.
  • $20, Tatsuya H.
  • $19.43 (4th donation), Jarkko K.
  • $17.59 (2nd donation), Rufus
  • $15 (8th donation), P. S. B. aka “fixpcpaul
  • $15 (7th donation), William S. aka “Supergoo”
  • $15 (2nd donation), Špiro T.
  • $15 (2nd donation), David K.
  • $15, Wen H. L.
  • $15, Barry T.
  • $15, Andy N.
  • $15, Mark B.
  • $13.53 (3rd donation), Ivan Bulychev aka “vanyok
  • $13.53, Nikos C.
  • $13.53, Emanuele B.
  • $13.53, Steffen S. aka “TSS”
  • $13.53, John T.
  • $13.53, Adrian P aka “anticupidon”
  • $13.53, Hans S.
  • $13.53, Paolo B.
  • $13.52 (4th donation), Andras Porga aka “GodmaNZ”
  • $13.52, Gerard V.
  • $13.51, Rosen T.
  • $13.51, Peter L.
  • $12.95 (3rd donation), Helmut T.
  • $12.95 (2nd donation), Lauri T.
  • $12.95, Marten J. K.
  • $11, Kazuyoshi Y.
  • $10 (9th donation), Kiril Sotirov
  • $10 (8th donation), Tony C. aka “S. LaRocca”
  • $10 (7th donation), Ronald Trip
  • $10 (6th donation), Geschenkideen
  • $10 (5th donation), SamVimes
  • $10 (3rd donation), Andrew Simpson
  • $10 (2nd donation), zetay
  • $10 (2nd donation), Tom Cordina aka “4Foot”
  • $10 (2nd donation), Philip E.
  • $10 (2nd donation), Adam aka “DJ Black Tea”
  • $10 (2nd donation), Thomas M. aka “Zeppo”
  • $10 (2nd donation), Mark B.
  • $10 (2nd donation), Masashi A.
  • $10 (2nd donation), Marcin W.
  • $10, Mariusz P.
  • $10, Christopher R.
  • $10, Steven W.
  • $10, Charles R.
  • $10, Ernest B.
  • $10, Wilson de Carvalho Jr. aka “24horasonline
  • $10, Charles O.
  • $10, Jonathan K.
  • $10, Luke R aka “RayZor PC’s”
  • $10, Frank Martin aka “”kitanis””
  • $10, Alessandro L. aka “Armido”
  • $10, Atusushi S.
  • $10, Felipe H.
  • $10, Julio A. P. M.
  • $10, Winston H.
  • $10, Dean P.
  • $10, mockturtl
  • $10, Andrew D.
  • $10, M7MED ALOTAIBI aka “Snix
  • $10, Kiernan H.
  • $10, Lukáš K.
  • $10, Steven H.
  • $10, Thomas W.
  • $10, Nick K.
  • $10, Sergey Y.
  • $10, Morten J.
  • $10, Jack H.
  • $10, Julio S. P.
  • $10, Michael Franzwa
  • $10, Michael D.
  • $10, Christopher S.
  • $10, Birendra M.
  • $8, Ubawuchi E.
  • $7 (3rd donation), Antonina K. aka “Tonya”
  • $6.76 (2nd donation), Sampsa P.
  • $6.76, Felix B.
  • $6.76, Matthieu S.
  • $6.76, David J.
  • $6.76, Andrew M. aka “droidz”
  • $6.48 (16th donation), Paco C.C. aka “kannabix”
  • $6.48 (2nd donation), Jan V. P.
  • $6.48 (2nd donation), Arnold Bechtoldt aka “arnoldB
  • $6.48, Yannick G. aka “Uggy”
  • $6.48, Dafni K.
  • $6.48, Mike S.
  • $6.48, Mickael P.
  • $6.48, Riccardo V.
  • $5.41, Petr K.
  • $5 (8th donation), Michael K.
  • $5 (7th donation), Miljenko D. aka “ljacmi”
  • $5 (5th donation), tommy_b
  • $5 (4th donation), lupinehorror
  • $5 (4th donation), Johnny Reel aka “Jraz
  • $5 (3rd donation), Neb Radojkovic
  • $5 (3rd donation), Simon Cygielski
  • $5 (2nd donation), Hrvoje R.
  • $5 (2nd donation), Performance by Design aka “Autocrosser @ Mint Debian Forums”
  • $5, Michał P.
  • $5, Bradley W.
  • $5, Omar A. D. L. T. A.
  • $5, Quang L.
  • $5, Todd J.
  • $5, Alberto S. N.
  • $5, David R.
  • $5, Teri D.
  • $5, NenadT aka “Joomla Modules
  • $5, Bogdan
  • $5, Robert S.
  • $5, Gipponi A.
  • $3.58 (3rd donation), Ron Panduwana
  • $3.14, Pradini P.
  • $3, Jose P. C. A. aka “uvas_1”
  • $3, Reinhold N.
  • $3, Nikolay A.
  • $2.98 (3rd donation), Jurek W.
  • $2.7, Resat A.
  • $2.59, Alessandro P.
  • $2 (7th donation), black mold test kits
  • $2, Azlan A Raof aka “lankapo
  • $2, Ryan Cragun aka “rcragun
  • $2, Travis H.
  • $2, jomar (john b.) aka “beta_tester
  • $1.35, Tim P.
  • $1.01, Laurentiu Lozan aka “coroner
  • $1 (4th donation), Snoring Solutions
  • $1 (2nd donation), Chile Holidays
  • $1 (2nd donation), cleaning granite countertops
  • $1, Trung B. Pham
  • $1, Fady R.
  • $1, Bojan U.
  • $1, dyxhenry
  • $1, Srinivasan A. R.
  • $1, Miguel A. D. G.
  • $1, Ferdinand Development
  • $1, cleaning granite countertops
  • $1, Tayfun ilme aka “PanxeR
  • $1, Santiago G. T. aka “melenas1414
  • $1, Julie E.
  • $1, Renato P.
  • $0.8 (3rd donation), Philip Patrick Butkiewicz aka “bagnz0r

Sponsors:

Money raised in October:

* Donations: $6100.32 (237 donors)
* Sponsors: $1423.98 (135 sponsors)

http://www.linuxmint.com/donors.php
http://www.linuxmint.com/sponsors.php

Rankings:

  • Distrowatch (popularity ranking): 2237 (1st)
  • Alexa (website ranking): 10,664th

Events:

News and summary:

  • The death of Robin was the most tragic and important event for many in our community this month. He was very active within Linux Mint and appreciated by a lot of people. I would like to add my personal condolences to all who miss him, his friends and family and the people within my team who were shaken by this tragedy.  
  • Linux Mint 12 was approved for an RC release and should come out in about 2 days. In terms of quality, there are concerns about mint4win and MATE. MGSE and the Gnome 3 desktop passed QA with success.
  • I would like to thank all the people who answered our call with donations and sponsorships. The support we got this month has been fantastic! The donations are at an all-time high. Some of them were extremely generous, and just to imagine 237 people gathered to help us is something truly unique. Many thanks to all people involved in helping us financially.
  • Thanks to all the people who help us by other means as well. Their help isn’t always as tangible and not as quantifiable but it’s an important part of our project. We work hard on making a good desktop, but we don’t engage in marketing or promotion. When people spread the word, show Linux Mint to their friends, neighbours and colleagues, when from 1 happy user we get 2, 3, or 4… when this buzz and excitement contributes to make our work known to others, our user base grows and the attention the media is giving us gets bigger. Today, we’re number #1 at Distrowatch. We can congratulate ourselves for getting there, not only our distribution but the project and the community as a whole.
  • Finally, just a quick note to KDE users. We will switch our focus to giving KDE another release and this process will start this December after Linux Mint 12 is out.

I would like to apologize to the community, the media, and the journalists who wrote to us to know more about our upcoming release. We’ve been extremely secretive and 3 weeks past the Ubuntu release it’s still unclear for most people exactly what the next Linux Mint will look like. The reason we’ve been so silent is because we didn’t want to promise something we could not guarantee. Today we’re finally ready to give you an in-depth preview of Linux Mint 12, codename “Lisa”. I hope you’ll enjoy it and I look forward to reading your feedback.

Gnome 2 vs new desktops

In Linux Mint 11 we made the decision to keep Gnome 2.32. The traditional Gnome desktop, although it’s not actively developed by the Gnome development team anymore, is still by far the most popular desktop within the Linux community. As other distributions adopted new desktops such as Unity and Gnome 3, many users felt alienated and consequently migrated to Linux Mint. We recorded a 40% increase in a single month and we’re now quickly catching up with Ubuntu for the number #1 spot within the Linux desktop market.

As much as we’d like to keep Gnome 2.32 a little while longer we need to look forward and embrace new technologies. This doesn’t mean we need to change the way people use their desktops, not at all, it means we need to try and do our best for people to feel at home again, but on top of a brand new base, a new layer of technology, one that is actively supported upstream and that can be maintained properly going forward.

From a technological point of view, Gnome 3 is a fantastic desktop, and it’s getting better with every new release. It will take time for Linux Mint to develop a Gnome 3 desktop that is on-par with what we had with Gnome 2, but eventually we’ll be able to do much more with it than was possible with the traditional desktop.

With this in mind, the future of Linux Mint is Gnome 3, the present of Linux Mint is a simple question: “How do we make people like Gnome 3? And what do we provide as an alternative to those who still do not want to change?”.

Gnome 3 and MGSE

Gnome 3 is shiny, elegant and modern looking. It’s a sleek desktop but it comes with a few problems:

  • It changes the way people use their computer
  • It’s application-centric, not task-centric (you switch between applications, not windows)
  • It doesn’t do multi-tasking well (you can’t see opened windows, system tray icons, etc..)

We’ve been using application menus, window lists and other traditional desktop features for as far as I can remember. It looked different in KDE, Xfce, or even Windows and Mac OS, but it was similar. Gnome 3 is changing all that and is developing a better way for us to interact with our computer. From our point of view here at Linux Mint, we’re not sure they’re right, and we’re not sure they’re wrong either. What we’re sure of, is that if people aren’t given the choice they will be frustrated and our vision of an Operating System is that your computer should work for you and make you feel comfortable. So with this in mind, Gnome 3 in Linux Mint 12 needs to let you interact with your computer in two different ways: the traditional way, and the new way, and it’s up to you to decide which way you want to use.

For this, we developed “MGSE” (Mint Gnome Shell Extensions), which is a desktop layer on top of Gnome 3 that makes it possible for you to use Gnome 3 in a traditional way. You can disable all components within MGSE to get a pure Gnome 3 experience, or you can enable all of them to get a Gnome 3 desktop that is similar to what you’ve been using before. Of course you can also pick and only enable the components you like to design your own desktop.

The main features in MGSE are:

  • The bottom panel
  • The application menu
  • The window list
  • A task-centric desktop (i.e. you switch between windows, not applications)
  • Visible system tray icons

MGSE also includes additional extensions such as a media player indicator, and multiple enhancements to Gnome 3.

Here is what it looks like (click on the screenshot to make it bigger):

As you can see it’s a mix of old and new. It’s a brand new desktop but with traditional components. We’re excited about the new technology but it’s important everyone feels at home. So a Mint desktop looks and behaves like a Mint desktop and this one feels both like Gnome 3 and the traditional Linux Mint desktops that preceded it. You can launch applications from the top left, easily switch between applications and workspaces using the window list or keyboard shortcuts, keep an eye on your notifications at the top and access Gnome 3 features like “activities” from the top-left corner.

The Fallback Mode

Gnome 3 requires video acceleration and that is something most systems have. In Linux Mint 12 we also made sure you could run Gnome 3 within Virtualbox, so if you enable 3D acceleration within your virtual machine, you should be able to enjoy Gnome 3 and MGSE without any additional drivers.

If you’re unlucky though, you’ll land into the “Fallback Mode”.

Do not be mistaken about the “Fallback Mode”, despite its looks, it has nothing to do with Gnome 2! It’s a Gnome 3 component and it’s completely incompatible with technologies such as Bonobo panel applets. It’s named appropriately as the “Fallback Mode” and it’s set to disappear eventually as Gnome 3 will gain more and more hardware compatibility.

MATE

MATE is a fork of Gnome 2.32, it looks and behaves exactly as Gnome 2.

The problem with Gnome 2.32 is that it conflicts with Gnome 3. It creates a lot of problems within the repositories and it would not be possible for users to run both Gnome 2 and Gnome 3. MATE on the other hand is supposed to be compatible with it. So you could have both MATE and Gnome 3 installed on your computer and be able to switch between desktops from the login screen.

In practice, MATE is a brand new project and it does conflict with Gnome 3 in many areas. We’re currently working hard in collaboration with the MATE developers to identify and fix these conflicts so that we can have both Gnome 3 and MATE installed by default on the DVD edition of Linux Mint 12.

Another issue with MATE is that, to be compatible with Gnome (3), it had to rename most of itself, and as a consequence, applications and themes that were developed for Gnome 2 need to be migrated towards MATE to become compatible with it.

Conflicts with Gnome and the migrations of applications and themes are easy to fix. So if MATE makes it to our liveDVD, it’s likely to come with some rough edges but with your feedback we’ll be able to solve most problems very quickly.

Search engines

Going forward, we won’t be using a custom search engine anymore. Linux Mint is the 4th most popular desktop OS in the World, with millions of users, and possibly outgrowing Ubuntu this year. The revenue Mint users generate when they see and click on ads within search engines is quite significant. So far this revenue’s entirely gone towards search engines and browsers. Our goal is to give users a good search experience while funding ourselves by receiving a share of this income. Search engines who do not share the income generated by our users, are removed from Linux Mint and might get their ads blocked.

In Linux Mint 12 and upcoming releases we’re hoping to provide users with the following commercial search engines: Ask.com, Google, Amazon, eBay, and the non-commercial Wikipedia.

It won’t only be down to donations and sponsorships anymore, your activity on the web, every search query you make and product you buy will help fund our project.

ETA

Traditionally, we release at the end of November, usually around the 20th. With that said, quality matters more than the time-frame and so until we’re happy with what we have, we won’t release it. We release “when ready” and so I can’t tell you for sure when that will be. I can tell you however how ready we are at the moment.

Our Gnome 3 desktop is fully ready and fully functional. We identified 10 bugs but they’re all minor and could get fixed either prior or post-RC.

We compiled and installed MATE alongside Gnome 3 on a test Ubuntu 11.10 machine before and were successful in running both desktops. We’re now packaging and building MATE differently and we’re progressing slowly but surely. We’re not 100% sure MATE will make it in time for the RC though and we do expect rough edges with it if it does.

Negotiations with browsers and search engines are still ongoing so the RC might miss a few search engines that could be added later on in the stable release.

At the latest we should have the RC out by the 11th of November. Again, that’s our goal in terms of time-frame, but if quality aspects come into play this date becomes irrelevant.

Feedback and reactions

We’ve been using Gnome 2 since 2006 and regarded by many as the best Gnome desktop available. With Gnome 3, we want to do the same again and let people decide on the experience they want to get, whether they want a pure Gnome 3 desktop, an MGSE one whether they want to stay with MATE. We’re dealing with three brand new technologies, in many ways we’re starting from scratch again. With this post you now have a better idea of Linux Mint 12 will be like, and so now and more than ever, we’d be delighted to know what you think of it, to get your feedback and your reactions.

Thank you for using Linux Mint and I look forward to reading your comments.