All the nice bells and whistles that mint comes with: mostly cinnamon and the upgrade manager out-of-the-box. I’ve been using it for a few months, and I prefer it over stock debian and normal mint.
This I really like Debian but on my everyday “production” system I run LMDE. I still have Debian but also all those small extra convince features and we’ll thought out defaults.
If you like running a Linux Mint workstation, its mostly the same but built on Debian instead of Ubuntu. It came from their goal of making a version of Mint that doesn’t have any dependencies on Ubuntu.
what advantage does it have over stock debian…?
All the nice bells and whistles that mint comes with: mostly cinnamon and the upgrade manager out-of-the-box. I’ve been using it for a few months, and I prefer it over stock debian and normal mint.
I normally run debian but I ran LMDE for a couple years and thought it was nice.
This I really like Debian but on my everyday “production” system I run LMDE. I still have Debian but also all those small extra convince features and we’ll thought out defaults.
oh nice, maybe ill give it a shot.
afaik, it just looks prettier and gets Cinnamon sooner if you use that.
It still has all the normal debian quirks.
If you like running a Linux Mint workstation, its mostly the same but built on Debian instead of Ubuntu. It came from their goal of making a version of Mint that doesn’t have any dependencies on Ubuntu.