this post was submitted on 04 Feb 2026
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Because switching from Windows can be intimidating and Mint is the literal opposite of intimidating. It's boring, simple, and clean, thus the perfect stepping stone. At least, it was for me and quite a few others I know. I still install Mint first on new hardware
I've been using Linux for more than 20 years. I've started with Ubuntu, then I've used Arch for a long time, then back to Kubuntu, then... I've recently switched to Mint.
I need to do work and not worry about anything: Mint is super clean, fast, with old school GNOME vibes (GNOME 3 is utter shit).
Would you say Linux Mint is ... refreshing?
Warning, this is my opinion:
No, a distro with a modified depricated non-upstream window manager is not a good introduction to Linux.
I am looking at you Cinnamon. Cinnamon is for Linux users who don't want to use Gnome 3 or KDE Plasma, I think.
I always recommend Fedora to newbs and Debian to newbs with existing Linux knowledge, because all the desktops are as close to upstream as possible. This is why I cannot recommend Ubuntu or any Ubuntu based distro for the desktop. ubuntu-server can ve good enough on servers only.
Cinnamon is the reason I don't recommend Mint to people, but it's mainly because I don't like it. The default UI has so much wasted space it's revolting, they tried to get the windows XP/7 feel with the app launcher and ended up with blocky, boring blank space.
Unless someone is familiar with MacOS and wants to use something similar w/ GNOME, I've only been recommending KDE spins or distros with it as default.