I have a lot of friends asking me of whether they should install Ubuntu 12.10 or Linux Mint 14, which is also Ubuntu - but a bit refreshed. Given that I reviewed both of them on the same system - Asus K54C, 2.4 Ghz Core i3 processor with 2 GB RAM, I thought a comparison between the mother distro and it's most famous derivate deem rational.
Results - table
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
From Linux Mint 14 |
Parameters | Ubuntu 12.10 | Mint 14 Cinnamon |
Size of ISO | 790 MB | 922 MB |
Booting time (post installation) | 9 sec | 20 sec |
Desktop | Unity with Gnome 3.6 | Cinnamon 1.6.7 |
Linux kernel | 3.5.0-17 | 3.5.0-17 |
CPU Usage (post installation) | 1-5% | 1-5% |
RAM usage (post installation) | 412 MB | 221 MB |
Installation time (with 1 MBPS connection) | 30 min. | 30 min. |
Wifi detection | Immediate | Immediate |
Touchpad detection | Automatic | Automatic |
Ease of use | A bit on the slower side | Really smooth to use |
Eye candy factor | Looks awesome! | Looks good with application colors matching the ash colored theme |
Repository | Ubuntu Software Center 5.4.1.2 | MintInstall 7.4.4 |
File Manager | Nautilus 3.4.2 | Nemo 1.1.2 |
As evident, the results highlight Unity makes Ubuntu a bit slower compared to Linux Mint with significantly higher RAM consumption. Cinnamon 1.6, on the other hand, gets it right.Ubuntu 12.10 is ahead in terms of booting time. Linux Mint, conventionally, take a bit of time to boot.
On aesthetics department, Unity looks simply awesome but a bit buggy and crashes often. Also, Unity is not customizable. Cinnamon 1.6 is more customizable and looks good with Nemo file manager the grey and dark colors complementing each other. Especially Nemo is way ahead of Nautilus in terms of looks. Linux Mint has some cool new wallpapers as well. Still, I'll keep Ubuntu marginally ahead in terms of looks.
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
From Linux Mint 14 |
From Linux Mint 14 |
From Linux Mint 14 |
From Linux Mint 14 |
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
From Ubuntu 12.10 Comparison |
This is my final verdict:
- Performance: Linux Mint 14 is miles ahead
- Aesthetics and Attractiveness: Ubuntu 12.10 is marginally ahead though Mint aesthetics are really good.
- Applications: Linux Mint applications work out of the box.
- Social Media Integration: Ubuntu 12.10 is miles ahead
You can read my reviews of the above mentioned distros from here:
- Review: Ubuntu 12.10
- Review: Linux Mint 14