Michael Maher

Mint Elyssa

Posted by: michaelmaher on: September 4, 2008

This is Linux Mint 5, codename Elyssa, based on Daryna and compatible with Ubuntu Hardy and its repositories.

features

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. For more information about Gnome-Do visit this link

.

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.

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.

Making things easier on the desktop means you don’t need to rely on the terminal that often. But don’t get us wrong, we do like our terminal! It’s faster, more to the point, and the commands (not like the buttons and menus in graphical interfaces) are the same no matter what language you use. With each release of Linux Mint 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?) …

… and as it wasn’t enough for the terminal to show light-hearted fortunes, we now have them said by a koala, a moose, or even Tux himself! (Don’t worry, if you don’t like this you can turn it off in mintAssistant, in fact it’s one of the first thing you’ll be asked by Linux Mint once it’s on your hard drive.).

If you like it , you can download it from [here]

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

 

September 2008
S S M T W T F
« May    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  

Fast Category

RSS Michael Maher’s blog