subratabera
Just another linux lover.
This is the first BETA release for Linux Mint 5, codename Elyssa, based on Daryna and compatible with Ubuntu Hardy and its repositories.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/elyssa.png
What's new in Elyssa
1. mintMenu improvements
In Daryna, mintInstall and the Software Portal made it easy to install applications. In Elyssa mintMenu is making it easy to remove them. You don't need to open synaptic or to launch a terminal anymore, if you want to uninstall an application, simply right-click on it in the menu and select “Uninstall”.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/easyuninstall.png *linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/easyuninstall2.png
Within the same context menu you can also choose whether you want that particular application to be automatically launched when you log in. It was already possible to do this with the "Session" tool from the Control Center, it's now possible directly from within mintMenu.
MintMenu now comes with a brand new configuration screen which lets you configure the following options:
Whether to show the sidepane (where parts of the menu end up after you hide them)
Whether to show recent documents
Whether to show comments for applications
Whether to swap names and generic names in the list of favorites
Whether to show icons for categories
Whether filtering should be done by clicking on categories or by hovering (mouse over)
The hover delay
Icon sizes for the main button, the applications and the favorites
Main button text and whether to show an icon
Custom colors for headings, borders and backgrounds
The number of columns in the favorites
The borders width
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/mintmenuconfig.png
From the configuration screen you can activate a new plugin which displays your 10 most recently opened documents.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/recent.png
The "system tools" and "others" categories were merged in with "administration" to make the menu smaller and to bring less confusion as to where to find configuration tools.
The speed of the menu was also improved and its memory usage reduced.
Favorites now support drag and drop and can be moved around and arranged with the mouse.
2. mintUpdate improvements
MintUpdate was introduced in Daryna and quickly became one of the most popular tools on the Linux Mint desktop. It came to our attention that a lot of people weren't aware of how it worked internally (for instance, the difference between its user and admin runtime modes). For this reason we developed an information screen from which the active logs can be read, and the runtime mode and process id can be seen.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/mintupdate-info.png
3. mintInstall improvements
The installation of the application via mintInstall is now much faster.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/mintinstall-local.png
4. Improvements in other tools
The network autobrowsing feature was removed from mintDesktop as it wasn't mature enough to be part of this LTS release.
Gnome 2.22 introduced its own compositing manager which can now be activated/deactivated from mintDesktop.
Mintupload's email feature was removed and replaced with a "Copy" button, which simply copies the shared URL to the buffer.
5. Desktop improvements
Gnome-Do doesn't just come installed by default in Elyssa, it's configured to run in the background. Press SUPER+SPACE and it should appear. From there you can quickly launch an application or use any of the advanced features provided by this tool.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/gnomedo.png
You can now change your wallpaper by right-clicking on an image and by selecting "Set as Wallpaper".
You can now check the MD5 signature of an ISO file by right-clicking on the file and by selecting "MD5 Sum".
You can now open a folder as root by right-clicking on that folder and by selecting "Open as root". This is a powerful but also a dangerous feature. A warning message will remind you that you're in root mode, a file browser called XFE will appear (the reason for it not being Nautilus is precisely because it looks different. This way you can associate the different look and feel with the fact that this application is run as root). From there on you've got unlimited powers so be careful because everything you launch from XFE, you launch as root.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/xfe.png
The Gedit text editor was configured not to create "~" files anymore. This feature although sometimes useful was often annoying. It is still available from within Gedit but not activated by default.
MP3 could be decoded out of the box in Daryna. In Elyssa you can now also encode in this format without having to install any extra codecs.
We improve the user experience with the terminal and this time we've added two things...
... more colors (see how the results of the grep are highlighted and how user and root modes use green and red so you know exactly in which mode you are?) ...
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/terminal-colors.png
... and as it wasn't enough for the terminal to show stupid fortunes, we now have them said by a koala, a moose, or even Tux himself!
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/terminal-fortune.png
6. Performance improvements
MintUpdate was refactored and its memory usage was drastically reduced. On some systems the amount of RAM used by mintUpdate after a few days went from 100MB to 6MB.
7. Better Look and feel
All Mint tools were reviewed and changes were made for their graphical interface to be more compliant with the Gnome Human Interface Guidelines.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/twf.png
8. Better Localization and documentation
9. More software available
Linux Mint 5 Elyssa is supported by CNR.com which features commercial services and applications which are not available via the traditional channels.
10. Changes in the default software selection
A new Mint tool called mintBackup was developed and added to Elyssa. This tool provides an easy way to save the content of your home folder into a single .backup file. You can then restore this content later on or somewhere else by double clicking on it (provided mintBackup is installed on the target system).
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/mintbackup.png
MORE HERE
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/elyssa.png
What's new in Elyssa
1. mintMenu improvements
In Daryna, mintInstall and the Software Portal made it easy to install applications. In Elyssa mintMenu is making it easy to remove them. You don't need to open synaptic or to launch a terminal anymore, if you want to uninstall an application, simply right-click on it in the menu and select “Uninstall”.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/easyuninstall.png *linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/easyuninstall2.png
Within the same context menu you can also choose whether you want that particular application to be automatically launched when you log in. It was already possible to do this with the "Session" tool from the Control Center, it's now possible directly from within mintMenu.
MintMenu now comes with a brand new configuration screen which lets you configure the following options:
Whether to show the sidepane (where parts of the menu end up after you hide them)
Whether to show recent documents
Whether to show comments for applications
Whether to swap names and generic names in the list of favorites
Whether to show icons for categories
Whether filtering should be done by clicking on categories or by hovering (mouse over)
The hover delay
Icon sizes for the main button, the applications and the favorites
Main button text and whether to show an icon
Custom colors for headings, borders and backgrounds
The number of columns in the favorites
The borders width
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/mintmenuconfig.png
From the configuration screen you can activate a new plugin which displays your 10 most recently opened documents.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/recent.png
The "system tools" and "others" categories were merged in with "administration" to make the menu smaller and to bring less confusion as to where to find configuration tools.
The speed of the menu was also improved and its memory usage reduced.
Favorites now support drag and drop and can be moved around and arranged with the mouse.
2. mintUpdate improvements
MintUpdate was introduced in Daryna and quickly became one of the most popular tools on the Linux Mint desktop. It came to our attention that a lot of people weren't aware of how it worked internally (for instance, the difference between its user and admin runtime modes). For this reason we developed an information screen from which the active logs can be read, and the runtime mode and process id can be seen.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/mintupdate-info.png
3. mintInstall improvements
The installation of the application via mintInstall is now much faster.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/mintinstall-local.png
4. Improvements in other tools
The network autobrowsing feature was removed from mintDesktop as it wasn't mature enough to be part of this LTS release.
Gnome 2.22 introduced its own compositing manager which can now be activated/deactivated from mintDesktop.
Mintupload's email feature was removed and replaced with a "Copy" button, which simply copies the shared URL to the buffer.
5. Desktop improvements
Gnome-Do doesn't just come installed by default in Elyssa, it's configured to run in the background. Press SUPER+SPACE and it should appear. From there you can quickly launch an application or use any of the advanced features provided by this tool.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/gnomedo.png
You can now change your wallpaper by right-clicking on an image and by selecting "Set as Wallpaper".
You can now check the MD5 signature of an ISO file by right-clicking on the file and by selecting "MD5 Sum".
You can now open a folder as root by right-clicking on that folder and by selecting "Open as root". This is a powerful but also a dangerous feature. A warning message will remind you that you're in root mode, a file browser called XFE will appear (the reason for it not being Nautilus is precisely because it looks different. This way you can associate the different look and feel with the fact that this application is run as root). From there on you've got unlimited powers so be careful because everything you launch from XFE, you launch as root.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/xfe.png
The Gedit text editor was configured not to create "~" files anymore. This feature although sometimes useful was often annoying. It is still available from within Gedit but not activated by default.
MP3 could be decoded out of the box in Daryna. In Elyssa you can now also encode in this format without having to install any extra codecs.
We improve the user experience with the terminal and this time we've added two things...
... more colors (see how the results of the grep are highlighted and how user and root modes use green and red so you know exactly in which mode you are?) ...
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/terminal-colors.png
... and as it wasn't enough for the terminal to show stupid fortunes, we now have them said by a koala, a moose, or even Tux himself!
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/terminal-fortune.png
6. Performance improvements
MintUpdate was refactored and its memory usage was drastically reduced. On some systems the amount of RAM used by mintUpdate after a few days went from 100MB to 6MB.
7. Better Look and feel
All Mint tools were reviewed and changes were made for their graphical interface to be more compliant with the Gnome Human Interface Guidelines.
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/twf.png
8. Better Localization and documentation
9. More software available
Linux Mint 5 Elyssa is supported by CNR.com which features commercial services and applications which are not available via the traditional channels.
10. Changes in the default software selection
A new Mint tool called mintBackup was developed and added to Elyssa. This tool provides an easy way to save the content of your home folder into a single .backup file. You can then restore this content later on or somewhere else by double clicking on it (provided mintBackup is installed on the target system).
*linuxmint.com/pictures/screenshots/elyssa/thumbnails/mintbackup.png
MORE HERE
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