Peppermint OS One Screenshots
On this page you’ll find all of the images in this review. They are ordered by title and including the install routine, booting, login, desktop, software manager and other important images.
Hover your cursor over the images to see the title. After you’ve clicked an image, it will load on a new page and you can then navigate back and forth by clicking on the smaller screenshots under it.
- The Internet applications menu.
- You can run Peppermint OS as a Live CD before deciding to install it.
- The login screen features the colorful Peppermint OS One wallpaper in the background.
- Peppermint OS One features web-based office applications by default.
- Use the Software Manager to add or remove programs.
- Use the Update Manager to keep your system up to date.
- Flash is installed by default, so YouTube videos play without the need to download anything.
- Peppermint OS One takes you to the login menu from this bootsplash screen.
- The Peppermint OS One installed desktop.
- Choose your application and then click the Install button in Software Center.
- You can add other web applications to your system by using Prism.

























(11 votes, average: 4.00 out of 5)

[...] one that is particularly interesting to review. Peppermint OS One is definitely in that category. Peppermint OS One is a web-centric Ubuntu remaster that passes up common desktop applications like OpenOffice.org in favor of web-based [...]
Superb distro! I love Mint, and PeppermintOS is a fantastic LXDE distribution. Lubuntu/Mint combination, super!
The wallpaper would fit best a distro called CinammonOS. :-)
I have gOS 8.04.2 or whatever the latest update is and it’s on my Gateway laptop. It is one of the oldest of the early distros that started experimenting with the Web and the cloud. Maybe I ought to replace it with this Peppermint OS. I’ll consider it. gOS has actually been a pretty good OS for me these past couple of years.
So if I add Mozilla Prism, Google Docs, and Dropbox to my Ubuntu install, do I have a cool “cloud OS” ?
Wait, for that matter, I could get an even cooler “cloud OS” by adding Google Docs, a VPN, and an online storage service to Windows Vista and I’d be living in the cloud!
[...] review on slashdot– I’ve covered a lot of remastered versions of Ubuntu since DLR launched. But, every once in a while, I bump into one that is particularly interesting to review. Peppermint OS One is definitely in that category. [...]
Looks interesting though some parts (such as links to Hulu, Last.FM, and Pandora) are useless for non US users. Still, an interesting idea in a “cloud OS”.
why the hell are you watching a video of a squirrel being skinned ?
I installed Peppermint Os today. In the past I used PcLinuxOS XFCE which I found too slow on my Thinkpad R40e. In the few hours I am using it I am very surprised about this fast distro. It looks also very stable and has all the new updates including Firefox 3.6.3. I am very enthusiastic and going to use it for a while. Therefore I want tgive the developer a compliment and advice others to use this new exciting distro.
I was about to link to this review, but that was until I saw the YouTube screenshot. Was this really the best YouTube screenshot you could find ?!? I second gino, a previous commenter on this review.
I really hope you can include another YouTube screenshot, because this takes the quality from your Peppermint review.
This seems like maybe a good candidate for netbooks, but I’m not sure – it may be light and quick and not need heavy resources, but doesn’t it also load up your net connection? If you had a slow wireless hookup, would you be bogged down?
We have issued a Fatwa against you for defaming our prophet!
Downloaded and tested it in a VBox’s vm with 256 MB allowed for RAM. After testing PCLOS Openbox with the same machine configuration, I can say Pepermint isn’t as good as the former. Moreover, if you use the cloud or the “prismatic” applications you’ll notice long lags and the system freezes.
Here typing this from the LiveCD of Peppermint. Also ran it in VMWare. In both instances it performed well. I did give it 1mb ram in the VM, and my laptop has 4gb. Not really into the cloud stuff, but I did download a few regular apps and games on the VM install. All ran well.
I would have to say this is definitely one of the better ‘buntu derivatives. Also one of the better LXDE examples.
@ tlmck:
Oops! Meant 1gb instead of 1mb ram.