Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sun 6th Apr 2008 21:00 UTC
Linux From Linux Mint's About page: "Linux Mint's purpose is to produce an elegant, up to date and comfortable GNU/Linux desktop distribution." To reach this goal, lead developer and founder Clement Lefebvre used (surprisingly) Ubuntu as the base, and added multimedia codecs to the distribution, by default. Later on, Mint deviated more from Ubuntu by adding its own artwork, web-based package front-end, and configuration tools (MintTools) to the mix. I installed the latest stable release, Daryna (4.0), released on 15 October of last year, to see what's what.
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RE[2]: Mint
by squarebottle on Mon 7th Apr 2008 02:15 UTC in reply to "RE: Mint"
squarebottle
Member since:
2008-04-07

To my knowledge, the actual "guts" are still Ubuntu, which is why the Mint release cycle is so influenced by the Ubuntu release schedule.

Yes, Mint makes a lot of it own tools that affect how the system can be used (as with MintUpload) and how it runs itself (as with MintUpdate), but it's still very much Ubuntu-based.

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