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Linux Mint 22.2 "Zara" has been officially released today, bringing with it plenty of enhancements across the board to the popular Linux distro.

Arriving with Linux kernel 6.14, being built on top of Ubuntu 24.04 ("Noble"). As a long-term support release you'll be able to easily use it until 2029, with new Mint versions using the same base packages to make upgrades even easier until then.


Pictured - Linux Mint 22.2

Not much has changed from the Beta reported previously on GamingOnLinux, apart from ensuring it's as stable as possible. As a reminder of some new bits:

  • Sticky notes supported with Wayland.
  • Revamped login screen styling to look better.
  • Hypnotix video player has two new viewing modes and performance improvements. It will also prevent your system sleeping while playing videos.
  • A brand new XApp called Fingwit dedicated to fingerprint authentication.
  • LibAdwaita was patched to work with themes. Also forked into LibAdapta for adding new features.
  • XDG Desktop Portal XApp now supports accent colours.
  • Various other improvements to XApps:
    • In Xviewer, the EDID-based color correction is now configurable and disabled by default. This feature was counter-intuitive and conflicted with the color management handled at hardware and desktop level.
    • A new thumbnailer was written for cover art in .aiff audio files: xapp-aiff-thumbnailer.
    • An iOS version of Warpinator is available.
    • In the WebApp Manager, the webapp description field is now editable.
    • When renaming multiple files and using enumerations, it is now possible to use leading zeros, define the starting number of the enumeration and its increment step.
    • The last renaming operation is also remembered and pre-selected.
  • A few tweaks to the colouring in the default Linux Mint theme.
  • The Software Manager welcome screen was improved, and the app explains the different between Flatpak and system packages.

Check out the announcement and what's new pages for more.

Article taken from GamingOnLinux.com.
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I am the owner of GamingOnLinux. After discovering Linux back in the days of Mandrake in 2003, I constantly checked on the progress of Linux until Ubuntu appeared on the scene and it helped me to really love it. You can reach me easily by emailing GamingOnLinux directly. You can also follow my personal adventures on Bluesky [External Link].
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5 comments Subscribe

Linux_Rocks a day ago
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Seeing that Linux Mint screenshot really makes me miss my gaming PC. D:
TheRiddick a day ago
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I know a lot of people use Mint so if they can double down and speed along the development of wayland support the better.
That would be good, yes. I don't notice a lot of mentions of Wayland in this release, but I suppose where we could expect to see more of that would be the next .0 release, not this .2 LTS, which we can expect to be fairly conservative.
I'll probably upgrade to this at some point but I'm not going to rush . . . what I have now is fine for the moment.
Lofty a day ago
i did the upgrade and it was surprisingly quick with no discernible changes to anything on my system. Even had to check the version number to see if it had actually upgraded emoji

I suppose that's a good thing emoji
Ponda 12 hours ago
Last time I checked they were targeting 23.0 for fully functional Wayland session. So, in about a year.
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