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Remix Could Bring Some Cinnamon Lovers Back to Ubuntu

Linux software review

Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix arrived just in time for the holidays. Its first stable version, released on Dec. 4, is based on Ubuntu 19.10 Eoan Ermine.

It utilizes Linux Mint’s Cinnamon desktop environment on top of Ubuntu Linux’s codebase. Work on several release candidate and beta versions stretches back to 2013. The efforts stayed under the radar until the announcement of the new distro’s debut stable release.

Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix is a mix of the Cinnamon desktop and Ubuntu Linux 19.04

This new distro layers the Cinnamon desktop over the Ubuntu Linux 19.04 base.

As its name suggests, Cinnamon is the only desktop option. What makes this release so significant is that it supplies a missing link in the current Ubuntu Linux desktop family.

This remix release could be a welcome gift for many Cinnamon desktop users who fancy the Ubuntu Linux family. Some Ubuntu Linux users moved to other Ubuntu desktop flavors years ago or outright fled Ubuntu Linux when parent company Canonical adopted the now-discarded Unity desktop. In its place, Ubuntu made GNOME the flagship desktop.

For Cinnamon desktop fans, this Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix entry is welcome news. I fall into that user class. I was unhappy with lingering issues that befell recent versions of Linux Mint, but I did not want to give up on the Cinnamon desktop Linux Mint’s developers created as an alternative.

Potential Cinnamon Unifier?

I found Feren OS to be a very reliable replacement for Linux Mint without issues. Feren OS is based on Linux Mint, Which itself is based on Ubuntu. A Cinnamon desktop offering based directly on Ubuntu’s newest release makes this Remix version a potential game-changer.

Other Cinnamon desktop options exist. Some distros offer Cinnamon as a desktop option, but they are not all based on Ubuntu. Debian Linux has a Cinnamon desktop variant. Linux Mint offers a Debian-based release with its Cinnamon desktop as a developmental option should something befall Ubuntu Linux.

Ironically, Feren OS has a notice that pops up on its website alerting users to check back on Dec. 25 for an announcement on the future of the Feren OS. So, it may be fortuitous to have a new Ubuntu-based Cinnamon desktop option in the mix.

Ubuntu Remix Back Story

Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix is an Ubuntu-branded OS released as an unofficial flavor of Ubuntu, a Gnu/Linux computer operating system. The Ubuntu branding is a bit of misdirection, though.

When loading and quitting Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix, the splash screen you’ll see is the standard Ubuntu purple screen and logo. The distro’s name is missing within menus and other internal signage.

An eye-jarring orange neon icon fills the center of a black and gold swirl screen display when the desktop loads. This is the default screen. You easily can change the screen appearance to a more comforting color or image display.

All that takes is right-clicking on the desktop (or go into system settings) to select from an ample inventory of colors and background images. Despite the inclusion of the “Ubuntu” name on the opening screen, this distro is not issued by the official Ubuntu Linux community.

Canonical does not support the Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix, nor is Canonical affiliated with this remix project. However, that non-affiliation easily could change after a few more Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix releases successfully assess if the new distro is a worthy adoption choice by Canonical.

The lead developer, Joshua Peisach (known by the handle “ItzSwirlz”), is an ex-developer of the now-discontinued Ubuntu GNOME project, according to some reports. Some Ubuntu team members also are helping with the development.

First Look

The Remix is designed for average computer users. This project is merely a repackaging of already available components intended to be completely ready for the end-user.

Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix utilizes Linux Mint's Cinnamon desktop environment on top of Ubuntu Linux's codebase

Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix is a new distribution that utilizes Linux Mint’s Cinnamon desktop environment on top of Ubuntu Linux’s codebase.

The developers kept a close eye on the features built into the Cinnamon desktop design without overwhelming new users. The default settings provide a familiar computing platform with few applets installed on the bottom panel and no screen applets activated.

This approach gives Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix a clean and uncluttered look. The same is true of its bundled applications. The installed software provides a basic assortment.

You wind up with a very functional desktop environment with basic accessories and a few productivity tools to get started. Even a few games are included.

What you do not get is a Welcome Panel that makes it easy to turn on tool sets and useful features. Conspicuous for its absence is the Firewall Configuration Tool, for instance.

GUFW, a standard Internet firewall application with its simple Firewall Configuration panel in most Linux distros, is not installed. That is a critical oversight, especially for new users who need a reminder to add firewall security.

Installation and Observations

Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix uses the Calamares installer and features Cinnamon desktop version 4.0.10. The ISO file is available only for 64-bit computers as an isohybrid, so you can burn it to a DVD disk or to a USB stick. It supports EFI and UEFI systems.

The installation process was fairly simple. I installed it on an existing partition that contained a no-longer needed Linux distribution. The Calamares installer completed that task with just a few clicks.

I did not encounter any major problems in setting up and using this Remix release, but I did have some run-ins with some of the Cinnamon features. That surprised me because the desktop is in an advanced state of development.

The troubles seemed more the result of its integration into the Ubuntu base. For example, several of the panel applets did not work.

A key failure for me was the screenshot launcher. It refused to load even though Cinnamon reported its installation on the panel was successful. No problem, I thought. I’ll just use the screenshot tool I expected to find in the Accessories section of the main menu. It was not there. So I had to install it from the software store.

Another sign of this Remix distro’s immaturity is unresponsiveness when trying to apply some of the settings. For example, the Themes panel was next to useless. Clicking on the window borders, icons, controls, mouse pointer and desktop categories and their contents produced no effect.

The more I used this distro over the last few weeks, the more inconsistencies I spotted with displays and such.

Bottom Line

Since I am an avid Cinnamon user, I was a bit disappointed in the performance of this initial stable release. The critical stuff worked fine, and the Ubuntu base is very forgiving. What did not work was an annoying list of small glitches. I am a lot less forgiving of those glitches.

I am sympathetic to the challenges a small developer team faces in swapping a heavyweight desktop design, the likes of Cinnamon, into a powerhouse operating system such as Ubuntu. Given that it has come this far in the last five years or so, I hope it will be a short time before the next stable remix release is ready.

Planned improvements for the 20.04 release include a new GRUB, a Plymouth theme, an improved layout application, and a Welcome screen. Also planned is a slideshow presentation during installation.

I want to see a better installed base of applications that is comparable to the volume of what Ubuntu offers in its desktop offerings. I am not in favor of application bloat, but I think the current installed software inventory is far too minimal.

I look forward to seeing the Cinnamon desktop spice up Ubuntu as an official competitive desktop option. Hopefully, this new remix distro will improve and become part of the official Ubuntu Linux lineup. I can not help but wonder why Canonical has not already done this without waiting for a third-party distro to join the Ubuntu spice rack.


Suggest a Review

Is there a Linux software application or distro you’d like to suggest for review? Something you love or would like to get to know?

Email your ideas to me, and I’ll consider them for a future column.

And use the Reader Comments feature below to provide your input!

Jack M. Germain

Jack M. Germain has been an ECT News Network reporter since 2003. His main areas of focus are enterprise IT, Linux and open source technologies. He has written numerous reviews of Linux distros and other open source software.Email Jack.

4 Comments

  • Hi, I think you guys know who I AM .

    I AM not the dev of Ubuntu GNOME or affiliated with it in ANY way. Please let me know where else people keep spreading this rumor around so I can solve it.

    Thanks 🙂

  • "…I was unhappy with lingering issues that befell recent versions of Linux Mint…"

    I, unlike you, left Mint after a MODERATOR told me to go somewhere else after I very civilly pointed out some problems. Best advice I ever got.

    Since it has become obvious that it’s now easier to simply copy Ubuntu than to fix obvious shortcomings (which USED to be C. Lefebvre’s M.O.), simply call Linux Mint what it has become–Ubuntu Mint. And get rid of the Mint Forums "echo chamber".

      • Thanks for the recommendation. I AM not anti-Ubuntu. Went to Mint when Ubuntu went rabidly anti-user. Now Mint has done the same (listening to the user is what made Mint SO great for SO many years). Seems as tho Ubuntu is coming back around, while Mint is still on their "bigger, faster, higher, feature-driven, "let’s copy Ubuntu" treadmill.Seems to be a Linux Plague, these days.

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