You have three options to choose from. You can install kde-plasma-desktop, which is the minimal installation required for KDE Plasma. Alternatively, you could choose kde-standard, which includes a number of KDE applications, wallpapers, and more.

Secondly, in the terminal, run the following command to install kde-full package. Since Linux Mint is based on the Ubuntu LTS edition, you should be getting the KDE Plasma version based on the current ongoing Kubuntu LTS plasma version.


Linux Mint Kde Plasma Download


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- Btw, could use advice about linux replacement for voicemeeter (w10) for adjustable simultaneous multi-output audio (headphones + tv on same source but diff adjustable levels/tweaks; watching stuff with other ppl who have better hearing than me (lousy lifelong loud tinnitus, +age) ... ) ?

... and about "security" : yes, I'm normally very careful, except for one thing: far too poor for pay-models of entertainment, so I must daily hunt around several, shall we say, "less savory" websites than I'd otherwise ever peruse... In w10, I have several protections tweaked quite well for this purpose, never see popups/ads/etc, and Avast rarely complains even in UberPnoid mode; - will this be a new concern in linux, and if so what should I use for protection(s), pls?

On Mint, you would be using plasma packages provided from the Ubuntu archives anyway. In other words, you actually installed Kubuntu on your Mint installation. You might be better off installing Kubuntu itself instead of running a mixed system, depending on how you added it.

Hello all. About the possibility to upgrade from Mint KDE 17.3 to Mint KDE 18. I made the following test : installing a machine with Kubuntu 14.04 LTS, waiting for a while, then its update manager proposes me now an upgrade from 14.04 to 16.04, including the plasma upgrade from v4 to v5, without reinstalling everything.

Therefore, even if a fresh install is sometimes better, for people who manage several or many machines like in a company, the mere possibility to be able to upgrade most of the PCs, while fresh reinstalling only the few which creates troubles, would be a real key advantage. It exists with kubuntu LTS, why not with Mint KDE? It has the same basis.

What do you think about it?

See screen capture: 

Thx!

I think that I may have a bug for you, I have the linux Mint 18 Sarah KDE LTS. I am using Dell Optipex GX 620 it has a 3.0 processor and 4 GB of ram, I just tried to make a boot able flash drive and the computer does not see it at all, and it is the same way when I go the format one.

I love the system.Linux mint 18 kde. Clicked on install and I still have a very long wait to final close to install disk icon.Wait ,Wait.What is wrong? I should get a notice saying final install wait wait.

Here is problem when install : ubi-partman failed with exit code 141. Further information may be found in /var/log/syslog. Do you want to try running this step again before continuing? If you do not, your installation may fail entirely or may be broken. The install will not let you wipe out disk and install linux mint. This linux mint 18 kde I need to get rid of windows 7.

My revised version of the wiring diagram still incorrectly states that the MESA card is a 7i96 (which Kyle used) instead of my actual 7i96S, which is very similar but has some crucial differences. Among those differences are: where the 5V power gets connected to the board (see an earlier post above), and which versions of LinuxCNC natively support both the newer board and the qtplasmac. Bottom line: you have to be targeting a LinuxCNC version of either 2.9 or 2.10. And that currently means you cannot just install from the default link on their download page. Those newer versions are currently only available from their buildbot, which involves adding some stanzas to your repository list, and yada yada. The good fellows on the LinuxCNC forum are telling me that, at present, some issue is preventing access to LinuxCNC 2.9 and that I should go for 2.10.

In one of my threads on the LinuxCNC forum, I sought help for the Mint issues with the card, and was advised to switch to the main branch, which runs on Debian Linux, a version known as Buster, which for LinuxCNC was version 2.8.4. However, the kind fellow advising me of that was not taking plasma into account.

In response to questions in comments about the links for the MESA items, and whether or not a MESA card is available for 1:1 ratio where the plasma machine has no voltage divider, see below. Also regarding questions of whether or not MESA makes a card that does both control of steppers and THC (torch height control), to my knowledge two cards are required, one for each. Kyle used MESA 7i96 for stepper control and MESA THCAD-10 for torch height control. My setup is similar, but I am using MESA 7i96S and MESA THCAD-2. All these setups also require some device (usually a used laptop) running LinuxCNC. A touchscreen type laptop is helpful, but not a necessity.

The Mesa board that I show inside the control box, 7i96S, is the one that controls the stepper motors. The only thing the Mesa THCAD-2 does is monitor & control the torch height. Mesa does indeed sell a torch height control board that can handle 1:1 ratio where the plasma machine does not have a voltage reducer. That is model THCAD-300. As soon as I get back to my computer I will post links to these items in the Mesa store.

Because I moved my THC module over to the plasma machine, really the only thing I gained by using the HV resistor was not having to send back my THC module to buy another one. I selected and bought my THC module before I bought my plasma machine. Then when I bought my plasma machine, I was shopping all kinds of features versus price and lost track of paying attention to its voltage ratio, and wound up getting a mismatch where my plasma machine is a 1:1 ratio without a voltage divider or reducer.

Note that nothing you have posted from mint is usable here except the fact you have the Geforce RTX 3060 gpu. Very few of the details posted from ubuntu have bearing on fedora since the installer and the package managers are totally different and my instructions and your question are based on a fedora OS.

For Fedora systems, new KDE plasma updates are available from the default repositories, make sure to keep your Fedora installation up-to-date, in order to install the most recent version of KDE Plasma using the following dnf commands.

Can you please let me know if this guide works with Peppermint OS? And if not, could you update the tutorial and include it? Peppermint is based on Ubuntu and Linux mint so could It work?

linux mint 17.2 kde version this install method does not work at all and no one seems to know how to install the latest plasma 5 on mint everyone method ive tried (including this one) short of compiling the damn source myself fails miserably!!

this version returns:

The following packages have unmet dependencies.

libreoffice : Depends: libreoffice-core (= 1:7.3.7-0ubuntu0.22.04.2) but it is not installable

Depends: libreoffice-writer but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-gnome but it is not installable or

libreoffice-plasma but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-nlpsolver but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-report-builder but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-script-provider-bsh but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-script-provider-js but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-script-provider-python but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-sdbc-mysql but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-sdbc-postgresql but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-wiki-publisher but it is not installable

libreoffice-base : Depends: libreoffice-core (= 1:7.3.7-0ubuntu0.22.04.2) but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-writer but it is not installable

libreoffice-base-core : Depends: libreoffice-core (= 1:7.3.7-0ubuntu0.22.04.2) but it is not installable or

libreoffice-core-nogui (= 1:7.3.7-0ubuntu0.22.04.2) but it is not installable

libreoffice-base-drivers : Depends: libreoffice-core-nogui but it is not installable or

libreoffice-core but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-sdbc-hsqldb but it is not installable

Recommends: libreoffice-sdbc-firebird but it is not installable

libreoffice-calc : Depends: libreoffice-core (= 1:7.3.7-0ubuntu0.22.04.2) but it is not installable

libreoffice-draw : Depends: libreoffice-core (= 1:7.3.7-0ubuntu0.22.04.2) but it is not installable

libreoffice-impress : Depends: libreoffice-core (= 1:7.3.7-0ubuntu0.22.04.2) but it is not installable

libreoffice-math : Depends: libreoffice-core (= 1:7.3.7-0ubuntu0.22.04.2) but it is not installable

libreoffice-report-builder-bin : Depends: libreoffice-core but it is not installable

python3-uno : Depends: libreoffice-core (= 1:7.3.7-0ubuntu0.22.04.2) but it is not installable or

libreoffice-core-nogui (= 1:7.3.7-0ubuntu0.22.04.2) but it is not installable

E: Unable to correct problems, you have held broken packages.

dave@dave-LinuxPC ~ $

Generally speaking, both KDE and Gnome have the largest software app libraries. And Gnome resurrected as Mat (and Cinammon) is lighter. So go with one of those, based on my commentary on them above. Unless you have an old netbook or something - then look at Peppermint6 (not 7, it's much heavier), or Bodhi 4.1 which both are great out of the box, beginner friendly, and run in less RAM. e24fc04721

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