Linux Mint should replace certain built-in driver packages with better alternatives & add additional software #559
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A reasonable list! opentablet driver: agreed, a upgraded tablet driver is absolutely needed. I'm missing the ability to have profiles for a variety of creative apps. (Krita, blender, etc). The default wacom driver in Mint works great but comes without profiles. Profiles are just some pref files, they shouldn't be a pain to integrate. It seems, most people don't use tablets, so there's no outcry of something missing like trivial profiles. I tried hard to get the opentablet driver to work but with little success. (Xppen star 3) Also, I sent a bug report and got a pretty good support to setup the old (I guess, deb) package. Unlucky this worked only partially. After some trouble I just uninstalled this driver. The flatpak then, doesn't work at all. I'm playing with the idea to write my own Wacom profile switcher.
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This is kind of a review after having used Linux Mint 21.3 for well over a month and recently installed V22.
For the most part I have been very happy with the way Mint works out of the box. That being said, I have had my fair share of hurdles that I have had to fix to make it fully operational. There are a few software packages on Mint that honestly could be replaced with better alternatives when getting the hardware to work out of the box. Here's the list:
Here are a few other software that I also consider a must have for a better baseline experience:
There may be other software as well, but these I think are the most essential for having a more well rounded, out of the box experience. Some are just basic baseline installations while others are more about integrating the functionality into what already exists.
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