Which Linux Mint is Better? Comparing Debian Edition & Standard

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2024-03-02に共有
Linux Mint Debian Edition (LMDE) is a very interesting distribution to say the least. It looks and acts nearly exactly the same as the standard version of Linux Mint, but LMDE is built on top of Debian instead of Ubuntu. In this video, Jay compares LMDE to the flagship edition of Linux Mint and also gives it an updated review.

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Time Codes
00:00 - Intro
01:31 - What is "Linux Mint Debian Edition" (LMDE)
03:10 - Why is the "Debian" edition necessary?
05:49 - Jay's overall impressions of LMDE

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#linuxdistro #Linux #LinuxMint

コメント (21)
  • I donated to Mint just yesterday because I like it so much. I do donate to charities but never donate to things like this until now. I really support what they are doing.
  • After a few years of intensive distrohopping, I finally ended up back at LMDE. A stable Debian with up-to-date Cinnamon desktop. If I ever need up-to-date software, there are always Flatpaks. Greetings from southern Germany.
  • @brentwoods973
    I switched over from Windows 10 a couple of months ago after researching Linux Mint and LMDE 6. It was an easy switch for me and other than the terminal box it was easy to learn. Actually very easy! I don't use it for anything but YouTube, family picture editing and general web based programs. It is amazing that I hadn't heard of Linux before now. Glad to get rid of Microsoft programs too. In my trials I found that LMDE 6 works best for me. I have one new computer that Linux Mint 21.3, even the Edge version won't work with it's sound system. LMDE 6 works flawlessly with it though so I am not going to spend the time researching the issue. Both versions of Mint work the same in all of my applications except the sound issue. Thanks for all of your videos as they have helped me out immensely!
  • @AdamNeal
    I have LMDE on my desktop and laptop and they have been very stable without any issues at all. I love how 'it just works' no matter what.
  • @GCTWorks
    I think that Linux Mint keeping LMDE and their Ubuntu based version in sync is a super good idea. It gives me confidence about the future of Linux Mint. Like all the recent drama with Red Hat and now VMWare, companies can be bought. Canonical could go the same way. Then the business model will likely change. This gives Linux Mint that ability to jump ship without having their user base and community lose interest or be forced out. Linux Mint (Ubuntu version) became my daily driver back in September 2023. I was coming from Windows 11. This was a major leap for me, and I have really enjoyed the experience. I fight less with my own computer. I recently had to go back to using my Windows install (I dual boot) in order to use a CAD application and the experience terrible. I had not realized how much I used to fight Windows. Microsoft has made Windows objectively worse since I left as well. For an operating system license that I paid for, it pisses me off that they offer me ads and sponsored content in my own operating system. Also, compared to Mint, it is really hard to find many settings in Windows. Mint exposes a LOT of settings in the GUI, maybe not as much as KDE Plasma, but is much easier to use than Windows.
  • Hi, Great video! Thanks, I just installed the Linux Mint 20.3 and aimed to upgrade to the most recent one. I already love it
  • @SnijtraM
    What really motivated me to switch my laptop from Ubuntu-based Mint to LMDE is the risk of corporate interference. Mint is going out of its way to provide the stability and freedom to choose non-proprietary sources, and the move to LMDE is 100% in line with that policy, seeing as how Ubuntu is silently "grooming" the user into a corporate style lock-in situation through the Snap store. With a creeping policy like that, it is easy to see that blacklisting Snap will interfere with the availability of apps as Ubuntu is planning to slowly kill off its repository ecosystem. I am planning for my desktop to follow soon.
  • @deultima
    I've been running LMDE on my main machine for a couple months now and I got nothing but praise for it. I love to live on the edge, so I even moved over to the testing branch for the Debian sources, that way it functions like a semi-rolling release, so I get access to newer kernels and packages. Combined with the Steam Flatpak, not only do I have a stable production machine, it also handles all my favourite games with ease.
  • @capnsalty0200
    I tried it and liked it and installed it and have been using it exclusively for the past 2 and a half years.
  • @abunk8691
    Mint user here and when I had an Nvidia gpu the lack of Driver Manager on LMDE was a concern for me but as I upgraded to an AMD gpu I would be fine interchanging between regular Mint and LMDE. That is due to the work the Mint team done to make the two versions very close which I really appreciate since I can just replace my Mint 21.3 install with LMDE 6 install and update packages and I can be off and running as I would have on regular Mint. For example, I can pretty much just run my first install script that installs packages to the LMDE version after by commenting a few ppa repo specific lines because Debian repos (main and more so backports) have newer versions of packages I need compared to the Ubuntu version Mint 21.3 is based on.
  • @prettysheddy
    Another great video and explanation. Also I would like if you did more proxmox vs/comparing xcpng videos. I understand Lawrence systems take but i would like the take of someone of primarily uses promox instead of xcpng.
  • Have been moving to LMDE 6 from Mint 21.2 on a couple machines recently. I had issues getting a somewhat dated Nvidia video card to work as Nvidia's driver install has a conflict with the LMDE installed driver. After trying several web offered solutions that suggested workarounds, I found that the Debian 12 repository has the driver version I needed and it installed with APT INSTALL and a reboot. Not sure why it took me so long to try that. ALSO for those of you who are into using Ventoy for your ISOs, I was unable to do a "Something Else" disk install without a boot failure. The installed LMDE system will hang looking for the Ventoy drive (My Ventoy was on a USB M.2 drive). It installs fine if run from a USB stick like they expect you to be using.
  • @channjose
    As a Linux beginner here, LMDE was a really good starting point, in which you have some useful out of the box software to get you seamlessly into the OS, but with some steps you have to do manually like the Nvidia drivers which I have to use, and that forced me into learning a bit more about how the terminal works and what can I do with it, if I had chosen Ubuntu Mint, I wouldn't have to deal with that so yeah, I'm happy I chose LMDE for my first distro.
  • @cyberdyne981
    I switched over ALL my Mint installations (Laptop, Desktop, Wifes machines and all my work machines) to LMDE back in 2022. IMO, it is as good/better than Ubuntu base. Initially, I thought it was a great way to get away from all the snap drama (which Mint avoided), but feared I would miss some of the PPAs. Nope - I missed nothing. For all my use cases it has been more stable (I had some weird random screen freezes on Mint Ubuntu edition that turned out to be xserver-xorg-video-intel related). The updates and patches have been smooth as silk, including Bookworm to Bullesye. At first I switched 2 machines, but now I'm LMDE everywhere, except a few small VMs that are bare bones Debian/xfce.
  • @nekonikku
    First time getting to one of these this early. The ecosystem of Linux flavors is kinda mind blowing when you thing about all the the people hours spent creating all these different approaches. Distro hopping really starts to make sense. Not sure if I want to dabble with BSD or Arch first. I’ve only dabbled with the Debian side of distros the past few years.
  • @mihkostas1340
    They also offer a 32-bit version , if for some reason you want to install mint on an older machine with a 32-bit processor.
  • Old Net/Sys Admin here... I've said it a thousand times, Linux Mint was born to make Ubuntu into a much-better desktop experience (that was in 2006). Then over the years, Mint morphed into a distro that made Ubuntu "BEHAVE" vs better! I really can't imagine how much Ubuntu/Canonical BS the Mint Team has to wade-thru to make a usable distro these days. But... I'm willing to bet good-money it's light-years easier to make a distro based on Debian! I stopped using Mint when 18.x arrived. That's because of the instabilities of Ubuntu 16.x at that time. I came back to Mint when LMDE 4 arrived and stayed on-board ever since. IMO... The Mint Team took the Debian-Base (with almost no changes each version) and just added their "Desktop-Love" to it!!!