December 24, 2019

Linux Mint 19.3 XFCE is a refined and polished distro

Linux Mint 19.3 has been released. I find Linux Mint one of the most polished, refined, and stable linux distros. Below are the release notes from DistroWatch and my XFCE test run screen shots. I also tried the Mate and Cinamon desktops and they are also very polished variations which offer different menu structures. The grub boot loader has finally been given a facelift, now including a black stylish black background. The inclusion of Draw instead of Gimp, and the new System Reports are welcome additions. Gimp has a long learning curve and the average user can now be productive with Draw. Celluloid is the video player now, which reminds me of VLC. Also the Software Store seems to load faster. I added the Nemo and Caja file managers which offer bookmarking locations.

The Linux Mint team has published an update to the project's 19.x series, which is based on Ubuntu 18.04 LTS. The distribution's newest release is Linux Mint 19.3 which is available in three editions (Cinnamon, MATE, and Xfce). One of the big new features in this release is proactive System Reports which will notify the user of potential problems. "You'll notice something new in your system tray after you install Linux Mint 19.3. A little warning icon tries to catch your attention and indicates there are a few things for you to review. In the past, we worked on improving documentation (such as the installation guide) and the welcome you get when you first log in (the first steps section of the Welcome Screen for instance). In Linux Mint 19.3, we're going a step further and we're trying to detect potential issues in your computer. If you're missing a language package, a multimedia codec, if a hardware driver or a new version of Linux Mint is available, this little icon will let you know and provide solutions." Further details can be found in the release announcements (Cinnamon, MATE, Xfce). Download (pkglist): linuxmint-19.3-cinnamon-64bit.iso (1,942MB, SHA256, signature, torrent), linuxmint-19.3-mate-64bit.iso (2,004MB, SHA256, signature, torrent), linuxmint-19.3-xfce-64bit.iso (1,902MB, SHA256, signature, torrent).















































Source: https://distrowatch.com/?newsid=10768

December 19, 2019

Display Linux Distribution Logo in ASCII Art in Terminal




See the picture above? You might have seen people sharing such desktop screenshot with terminal showing the logo of the Linux distribution used in ASCII art. Looking at those screenshots, you may wonder how to show the logo of Linux distribution in ASCII art in the terminal.

In this tutorial, I’ll show you two tools that will display Linux logo in the Linux terminal:
Neofetch
Screenfetch

Apart from the logo of the Linux distribution you are using, these tools also display the following system information:
Linux distribution version
System model
Linux kernel version
Uptime
Packages
Shell version
Screen resolution
Desktop Environment
Windows Manager
Theme and icons
Terminal tool in use
CPU, GPU and RAM information

Honestly, the main purpose of these tools is to be used in screenshots to show other users what distribution you’re running, what theme and icons you’re using etc.
1. Use Neofetch to display Linux distribution logo in ASCII art

Neofetch is a command line system information tool written in BASH that displays information about your system next to an image, generally your OS logo, or any ASCII file of your choice.

Neofetch is highly customizable through the use of command line flags or the user config file. There are over 50 config options to mess around with and there’s the print_info() function and friends which let you add your own custom info. You can read its wiki page for more information.

Neofetch can also be used in macOS and BSD systems.

Installing Neofetch
To install Neoftech in Debian, Ubuntu and other Ubuntu-based Linux distributions such as Linux Mint, elementary OS, Linux Lite, Zorin OS etc, use the command:sudo apt install neofetch


If you are using Ubuntu 16.04 or if the above command didn’t work, you can use this PPA:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:dawidd0811/neofetch
sudo apt update
sudo apt install neofetch


For other Linux distributions, check the installation instructions on Neofetch GitHub page.

Using Neofetch is fairly simple. Just type neofetch in the terminal and it will display the Linux logo in ascii form:




2. Use screenFetch to display Linux distro logo in ASCII art

screenFetch is another way to display Linux distribution logo in the terminal. You don’t have to specify anything, it will auto-detect the Linux distribution. And not just logo, screenFetch also displays some basic hardware information alongside it.

Install screenFetch
To install screenFetch in Ubuntu based distributions such as Linux Mint, elementary OS, Linux Lite, Zorin OS etc, you can use the command below:

sudo apt-get install screenfetch


Note: For Ubuntu-based distributions, you’ll have to add a PPA (as suggested by Benjamin in the comments). Use the command below:

sudo apt-add-repository ppa:djcj/screenfetch
sudo apt-get update
apt-get install screenfetch


To install screenFetch in Arch-based distributions such as Antergos, Manjaro, Chakra etc, use the command below:sudo pacman -S screenfetch


To install screenFetch in Fedora-based Linux distributions such as Korora etc, use the command below:
|
sudo dnf install screenfetch

Using screenFetch

Using screenFetch is utterly simple. Open a terminal and use the command below:

screenfetch


That’s it. You’ll see the logo of your Linux distribution displayed in ASCII art along with some information about your system:


Taking screenshot with screenFetch [Optional]

Now, this is optional because you can use the Screenshot tools to take the screenshot of the displayed ASCII art in the terminal. But if you install command line screenshot utility, scrot (it is available in the default repository of several Linux distributions), you can automatically take a screenshot of the displayed Linux logo along with your desktop with the command below:

screenfetch -s


If I combine screenFetch with vintage looking cool-retro-term, the result is even more awesome:





Source: https://itsfoss.com/display-linux-logo-in-ascii/





December 11, 2019

Linux Mint Tweak: How to change Firefox to use Google search as the default

Issue: Linux Mint locks down the Firefox browser with a few sponsored search engines. My favorite Google is not even available. See below.





As a Linux Mint user, it is frustrating to use the supplied Firefox search engines of DuckDuckGo,, LinuxMint, Startpage, Twitter, and Wikipedia. There is a work around available right from the Linux Mint website. Select the Google Icon. The link is below. After applying the fix, select Google as your default search engine.









https://www.linuxmint.com/searchengines/anse.php?sen=Google&c=y

And after applying the update, you can select Google.



December 1, 2019

It's Official: Chromium-Based Microsoft Edge Web Browser Is Coming to Linux


Microsoft has confirmed during its Ignite 2019 conference that the forthcoming Chromium-Based Microsoft Edge web browser will also be available on the Linux platform.



Initially designed only as a replacement for the existing Microsoft Edge web browser that ships with the latest Windows 10 operating system, the new Chromium-based build aims to be cross-platform, allowing users to use it on their Windows PCs, Macs, and even Linux PCs, as well as on mobile devices.

During the Microsoft Ignite 2019 conference, an annual gathering of technology leaders and practitioners, the tech giant revealed all the platforms on which is upcoming Edge browser will be compatible with, such as Android, iOS, and macOS, and, to our surprise, a Linux version will be coming in the near future as well.

Chromium-based Microsoft Edge launches on January 15th, 2020
At the moment, Microsoft's Chromium-based Edge web browser is still in development with an RC (Release Candidate) build already available for download on Windows and Mac platforms. The company confirmed the general availability on January 15th, 2020, but don't expect it to be available on Linux at that time.

Microsoft hasn't detailed its plans for the Chromium-based Edge browser on the Linux platform, so we'll just have to trust them and wait for the first pre-release version to hit the streets to believe Microsoft really does care for Linux users and it's not just showing off to be cool again.
While the Chromium-based Microsoft Edge web browser promises numerous interesting features, most of them will be useful only to Windows users, of course, so for Linux users the upcoming web browser might be yet another Chromium clone, so you better stick with the original, which is open source and free to download on all GNU/Linux distributions.
Here are all the platforms the new Microsoft Edge is compatible with. Linux coming later. pic.twitter.com/k5k0slsfAK — Zac Bowden (@zacbowden) November 4, 2019

Source: https://news.softpedia.com/news/it-s-official-chromium-based-microsoft-edge-web-browser-is-coming-to-linux-528111.shtml