Score:0

"Correct" way to install with only Cinnamon and sddm

ae flag

New laptop, I want to install linux on this machine. I've tried a couple of window managers in a VM and settled on Cinnamon as wm and SDDM as DM.

I'd also prefer to have a Ubuntu like system as a base (for things like package manager and basically bigger community to search in case I have issues).

As far as I know, there are no distributions that have cinnamon as their installed window (unless maybe Mint Cinnamon edition?).

I'd prefer not to have other window managers and too much additional crap that I won't use. So installing a full Ubuntu and then add cinnamon is not my preferred way to go.

Should I just install Ubuntu server (so that I don't install a window manager but have a base system) and then install cinnamon on top of that? Or is that a bad idea?

cn flag
You are asking for opinions and those questions are subjective. https://askubuntu.com/help/dont-ask If you want a generic Linux answer please use https://unix.stackexchange.com/ Mint and the sorts are off topic as they never applied for official support from askubuntu.
us flag
*Should I just install Ubuntu server (so that I don't install a window manager but have a base system) and then install cinnamon on top of that? Or is that a bad idea?* -- If you know how to do it, then it is certainly not a bad idea. In case you want to know how to do it, ask a new question specifically about this.
guiverc avatar
cn flag
FYI: Cinnamon is a DEsktop, and not a WindowManager. The Cinnamon DE uses the `muffin` WM (it used to be packaged separately, but packaging was combined for Debian & Ubuntu some time ago)
Dieter Vansteenwegen ON4DD avatar
ae flag
@guiverc Thanks. I'll try to be correct next time. Still trying to get my head around some of this terminology.
Dieter Vansteenwegen ON4DD avatar
ae flag
@Rinzwind I thought about this before asking the question and ended up deciding that "correct" way was technical enough since I don't expect there to be loads of ways to install a system without DE/WM and then install just one without ending up with a broken system. If you feel this is asking for opinions feel free to remove the question. Too bad this can't be asked/answers aren't appreciated here...
Dieter Vansteenwegen ON4DD avatar
ae flag
@ArchismanPanigrahi Unless there are specific things I should watch out for besides installing the server version and then installing cinnamon, then I should be fine. Thank you for you answer!
Score:1
de flag

You may try the ubuntu cinnamon remix that has Ubuntu as core featuring the Cinnamon as desktop environment. The link is here

cn flag
we can only provide answers that use official Ubuntu. Other versions are off topic.
Dieter Vansteenwegen ON4DD avatar
ae flag
@Rinzwind So, just to be sure. If I want to post an additional question on this ubuntu cinnamon remix, I'm not supposed to do this here? Am I better of in the Ubuntu forum? SE Unix pages? I'm a bit reluctant to ask in a specific Ubuntu Cinnamon Remix crowd since answers there will likely be biased...
guiverc avatar
cn flag
@DieterVansteenwegenON4DD Only Ubuntu and *official* flavors of Ubuntu (https://ubuntu.com/download/flavours) are on-topic here. If/when Ubuntu Cinnamon *remix* becomes an official flavor, it'll be on-topic here. For now they provide their own support system (telegram group)
Dieter Vansteenwegen ON4DD avatar
ae flag
@guiverc Ok, thanks.
guiverc avatar
cn flag
A form of this question has been asked at https://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2465921&p=14053748#post14053748
mangohost

Post an answer

Most people don’t grasp that asking a lot of questions unlocks learning and improves interpersonal bonding. In Alison’s studies, for example, though people could accurately recall how many questions had been asked in their conversations, they didn’t intuit the link between questions and liking. Across four studies, in which participants were engaged in conversations themselves or read transcripts of others’ conversations, people tended not to realize that question asking would influence—or had influenced—the level of amity between the conversationalists.