Linux Mint 7 (KDE)

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Requirements & Installation
Here are the system requirements for use of Linux Mint 7 (KDE):
A minimum of 4GB of free space and 256MB RAM are needed. For a comfortable experience we recommended to have at least 512MB RAM and 10GB of free space.

Like the Gnome version, the KDE version is a Live CD. So you can simply boot up and you’ll find a usable KDE desktop where you can click the Install icon to begin your installation. The install is very easy and took about 10 minutes or so. Even if you’ve never installed Linux before you shouldn’t have a problem installing the KDE version of Linux Mint 7.

I had no problems with my install and was able to boot right into my new KDE desktop.

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1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (18 votes, average: 4.56 out of 5)
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Related Posts:

  1. Linux Mint 7 (Gnome)
  2. Linux Mint 7 (XFCE)
  3. Linux Mint 8 KDE (Helena)
  4. Linux Mint 8
  5. Linux Mint 9 (Isadora)

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17 Responses to “Linux Mint 7 (KDE)”

  1. Reply  |  Quote

    Sounds like a winner. I’m gonna grab a copy and at least try it out in my sandbox on Virtualbox OSE. However, right now I have some NEW TOYS, with KDE 4.3 being available, so I have been playing with it in sidux and so far it is behaving really well – better than KDE 4.2.4. When Mint adds KDE 4.3 to their mix, it ought to be EVEN BETTER, because KDE 4 has now stabilized and the 4.3 release is all about bug fixes and improvements to existing code (and there will be monthly maintenance releases until the first of the year, after which 4.4, a feature release, is planned).

    Nice review, sounds like Mint is worth a look in KDE skins.

  2. Reply  |  Quote

    For people new to Linux, Mint-Gnome or Mint-KDE probably rates a 5/5. It is going to do a no-fuss install and the things most people want are going to work with very little, if any, fiddling around. So what else is there, really?

    PCLOS 2009 and Mepis trail behind only by a small margin and they deserve a look by new people as well.

    But the Mint team is doing beautiful work with its desktops and its understanding of what many people coming over to Linux expect in a contemporary system.

    My experience with an earlier version says that wireless is going to work. Suspend/hibernate may require just a small bit of tinkering depending on a person’s hardware (and the kernel) but it is probably going to work. If it does that is significant for laptop users.

    Clement LeFebvre is one impressive team leader!

  3. Reply  |  Quote

    ill have to give mint (kde) a try… im a KDE person.. but mint has taken gnome and made it nice… i always say.. when is gnome not gomish.. when it is linux mint.. so my latest main home distro is mint… but since im partial to KDE ill give mint KDE a shot…..

  4. Reply  |  Quote

    @ Bill Julian:that wireless is going to work.

    I run Kubuntu 9.04 KDE 4.3 on my laptop and all that works flawlessly. I don’t see a reason why it shouldn’t work the same in LinuxMint since it is based on Ubuntu.

    I like LinuxMint, especially their TastyMenu, but I have been following KDE 4.x development and Kubuntu was the best distro that kept up with all updates. Besides, I don’t have a DVD at the moment and LinuxMint, for some strange reason, wasn’t offering a CD for KDE.

    I also will wait until they offer KDE 4.3. For some reason, I could never use Gnome especially when they keep insisting on including Mono by default.

  5. Reply  |  Quote

    Gave Mint 7 KDE spin a try. First impression: more polished version of Kubuntu — maybe the Kubuntu folks could take some lessons here.

    After a short time I realized the version of KDE 4 wasn’t as feature-packed as the KDE desktop available in Mandriva or Fedora 11. After changing repositories and downloading the development release of KDE 4 from Ubuntu repos, the distro really worked well — surprising given a testing version of KDE4 (is that redundant?).

    However, the big killer for me was the segmentation fault preventing running QGIS — a must-have for my computing needs. So, back to RPM-based distro hopping for now.

  6. Reply  |  Quote

    My desktop PC has only 256 MB RAM. Will Linux Mint 7 KDE run smoothly with minimal desktop effects enabled?

  7. Reply  |  Quote

    Hands off Mint — especially if you are an international user. As with Kubuntu, their KDE language packages are always broken. For proof, see here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/19616885@N00/3786255180/
    The Mint people also refused to offer a fix when the same bug was reported by me in a Min 6 pre-release and they even claim that’s not their fault, because KDE 4 is supposed to be a (and I quote) “mess”: http://forums.linuxmint.com/viewtopic.php?f=109&t=23316
    Fixing the bug was “against their policy” during the Mint 6 development cycle and it obviously stayed the same for 7.

    So if you are looking for a new Linux distro, get one where bugs actually get fixed.

  8. Reply  |  Quote

    In addition to the forums and wiki, the Linux Mint IRC Support channel is a great place to get live help. xChat in Gnome and Quassel in KDE.

  9. Reply  |  Quote

    Linux Mint 7 KDE is a great distro. Sad to say that’s a no go for me because I use a 64 bit system. I do have it on my 32 bit backup system. People need to focus more on 64 bit but that’s just my opinion.

  10. Reply  |  Quote

    @ windmonger:Probably to slow at 256 megs of ram.
    Linux Mint does have a XFCE version that will run snappy
    for your box. Good luck.

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