Usually there are two devices in the network, my pc and the server. Yesterday I started another pc with Linux Mint. On this pc no samba server was installed but on my pc was. So I uninstalled samba server on my pc and I synchronized all packaged containing smb or samba. Now on my pc Thunar network is empty. On the other pc I can see 3 devices, my pc, the other pc and the server. Also when I open Windows Network I can see a workgroup on the other pc but not on mine. That means it's not only a samba problem, it's a network problem since my pc doesn't list any linux devices.

I have an older inspiron laptop and some distros do not see my wifi card. Before I wipe out Mint 13 and try a new install of this Mint 17 xfce, does anyone know if we are having good success at seeing network cards? Or will I need as in the past a wired connection first?


Linux Mint 20.3 Xfce Download


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First thanks for a great distro (linuxmintxfce).

I am from Denmark and I help persons with their PC-troubles via a PC-helping group.

Some of the helped persons prefer LinuxMint for windows xp.

LinuxMint is a brease to install and everything works as an usual windows user expects. Just no extra work to be done.

I believe that this is a great distro, but the fact is that I cannot get the 64-bit dvd to boot. Tried it on two different machines today.

The one I am writing this from has Linux Mint 16 xfce installed. That distro booted and installed OK.

Im using linux mint 17.2 with XFCE.My graphical interface went down so i had the stupid idea of going to tty1 and type "startx".Xfce started with a default session look, witch is different than what i got before doing this. It has a differente appeareance.How can i go back to the previus xfce-LinuxMint17 default appearence?

Once you delete this directory and reboot, linux mint reverts to its 'out of the box' look. It also automatically generates a fresh ~/.config/xfce4 directory to take its place, with mint's default 'factory' settings. The xfce-default login screen may persist after the first reboot, but rebooting a second time takes care of that as well.

If this is a deal breaker for you, and you're feeling adventurous, you might try and make a backup of the ~/.config/xfce4 directory before deleting it, and try comparing your backed up configurations with the newly generated ones (e.g. using xxdiff), and try to figure out which files are safe to copy over and which are not.

PS. Obviously, I suspect most people who bump into this question will do so after having ran 'startx' already. However, if you haven't yet and are considering doing so to get an emergency graphical interface up, the easiest thing to do is to back up your ~/.config/xfce4 directory first, so that you can safely restore it later.

I hope your linux adventures have been rewarding so far!! It definitely got me learning a lot more about what my computer does, what things I wish it did not do (and how to correct that). I moved over in 2012 and have not done a Windows install since.

I have my laptop setup to a monitor so Whenever Linux mint locks my computer, it changes the orientation of the screens so that my monitor displays my laptop screen and there not side by side. every time this happens I have to set the screens back to normal, can anyone help me fix this?

I am just about to try this tutorial but, I want to ask something before I do this, in case I face a problem or issue while installing Linux mint, I got a PC Pentium 4 (3.00GHz ) and also Ram 1 Gb, its work? e24fc04721

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