What to do after installing Linux Mint 21.3
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- Опубліковано 31 січ 2024
- #linuxmint #linux #tutorial
Say you’re a beginner, you have watched our previous video and decided to install Linux Mint 21.3, the latest iteration of the very popular Linux distribution, as of the time of recording the video. Now, you’re wondering what to do next. You’re in the right place!
The terminal commands used in the video:
sudo apt update
sudo apt upgrade
sudo apt autoremove
sudo apt autoclean
sudo apt clean
sudo apt install
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Nice.
But if someone new have this bug on update app, he will uninstall system very fast.
Great video! Cheers, Ben
Thank you so much Ben! Cheers!
Great video
Thaaanks!
Great well presented Video. Now I will maybe stop Distro Hopping and get away from Windows 11 more. I am at this stage but after much trial and error, I am running LMDE on a seperate Mini-pc so I don't screw up my work Machine.
Thank you so much! That's a good approach!
It just works (it's not windows)! 😂😂😂
Of course! (Sorry for a late reply!)
Subscribed
Thank you so much!
Bravo kralju
Hvala drugar!
I cant display on my tv as 2nd screen (mirror or extend) through hdmi. It works on windows
I haven't had that problem. Install arandr and lxrandr to see if you can get things working with them. They should show up in the menu after being installed. If not, log out, back in, and check again. Good luck.
Mine runs on a 13 year old Toshiba Satellite....... no problems.
Of course! It's Linux Mint! 🙂
What desktop environment did you use?
@@anlexaify Cinnamon
Was thinking of moving from Windows to mint. Your video has convinced me not to. First thing you tried to do didn't work and you had to use command line workarounds. Linux isn't for me . . .yet.
Just change the sources for your updates. The software sources application should be in the menu. Setting sources to something nearer you may be preferable anyway, but you can try others if they are faster. Any source can have a glitch from time to time, but it doesn't matter because you can choose a different one. One not working doesn't mean the whole distro is broken, just that one source had a problem. Just try another one. I've done it a number of times for the same reason as in the video, and to get faster downloads.
I ran Mint for about 10 years and had very few problems. I suggest trying Mint on a separate drive. That way you can choose which one you want when booting up, try Mint from time to time or run Windows if needed.
What was your point of this video? Get people to switch to Linux or get people to stay on Windows? Showing that the simple thing of just installing the OS renders errors is not the way to get me or other Windows users to switch. I do not believe any of my Windows installations ever got an error. And I have used Windows since 3.11. Erase this video and remake it because you are only hurting Linux!
That's a good question, and thank you for that! We couldn't do a video and hide things from people! The point is that one can switch to Linux easily, and she/he can stumble upon issues in the process. However, they should not be scared by the issues, the issues are not that hard, and it's easy to find help for any problem people might encounter. So, thank you one more time!