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Monday, 30 July 2012

LINUX MINT 13 -AWESOME TIPS And TRICKS COLLECTION

LINUX MINT 13 -AWESOME TIPS And TRICKS COLLECTION



The below tips and tricks for the linux mint are collected from the web sources and compiled to one place .I am not the actual author of these tips and tricks .I would like to thank sites like Linuxandlife and Techsupportalert for these work


Things to do after fresh installation of Linux Mint Mate 13

Update System
As always on a freshly installed system, the first thing you need to do is to update the packages. To do so, you can click on the shield icon on the notification area, enter the password and the update manager will appear. Click on the Install Updates button to do the system updating. It will take a while depending on your network speed.



You can also open the terminal and run the following command for system updating:
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get upgrade


Install proprietary driver for your graphic card
If your computer has a dedicated graphic card, you should consider installing the proprietary driver for it. When the open source driver does get the job done, it still cannot hold a candle to the proprietary one. To check for available proprietary drivers, open the Mint menu, go to control center then Additional Drivers then select the driver to install. If you are using an ATI card, I recommend you to pick the second driver in the additional drivers window since the first one had caused my system to crash.



After installing the driver, you need to reboot the system for the new driver to take effect.



Change the search engines of Firefox
In Linux Mint 13, Firefox uses two search engines, Yahoo search if you use the search box and DuckDuckGo if you search in the address box. I always prefer Google over these search engines so one of the first things I did after installing Linux Mint 13 was to change the Firefox search engine back to Google search.

To change the search engine in the search box of Firefox to Google, you just need to open Firefox then go to the following address:
http://www.linuxmint.com/searchengine_google.php

After that, click on the drop down list in the search box and select "Add Google"



To change the search engine of the address bar from DuckDuckGo to Google, you open Firefox , type about:config on the address bar. You will see a warning, just click on the "I'll be careful" button to go to the config page. In this config page, scroll down until you find the line that begins with "keyword.URL":



Right click on this line and select the Modify option. The box to edit the search engine will appear, in this box, you just need to replace the DuckDuckGo url with Google:
http://www.google.com/search?q=



Click ok and everything is done. Now both the address bar and the search box use Google as the default search engine.


Get more themes and icons
Linux Mint 13 comes with very few themes and icon sets so I think everybody would love to get more themes and icon to decorate the desktop. The best place to look for nice themes and icons in my opinion is Gnome-look. Just go there and search for the themes and icons you like. Also remember to read the installation instruction of each theme and icon set.

Here is my Linux Mint 13 desktop with Delorean Noir theme and ubo icons





Get a conky setup
Conky is an amazing linux application. A neat conky will make your desktop look amazing. I may be accused of being flamboyant but a conky setup was the first thing I got for my Linux Mint 13 desktop.

Take a look at the awesome Reloj Conky config:




If you are interested in conky like me, you can check my articles about beautiful conky configs.


Customize the Mint Menu
You can use the Mint Menu to search for and launch applications or access quickly to preferred folders. To customize the Mint Menu, right click on it and choose the Preferences option and the Menu preferences window will open. To add shortcut to your favorite folders, just go to the Places tab and click on the New button to add new folders to the Mint Menu:



To customize the Favorites list on the Mint Menu, you can right click on each application to remove or add it into the Favorite list:



You may find that after you remove some applications out of and add new ones into the Favorite List, the icons arent arranged into the order you want and you cannot drag these icons around on the menu. To change the order of the icons on the Favorites list, you need to edit the file ~/.linuxmint/mintMenu/applications.lst. Here is how this file looks to get the Mint Menu in the screenshot below. ( Note: after you edit the applications.list file, you need to right click on the Mint Menu and select Reload plugins to restart the Mint Menu)
location:/usr/share/applications/firefox.desktop location:/usr/share/applications/thunderbird.desktop location:/usr/share/applications/pidgin.desktop location:/usr/share/applications/xchat.desktop separator location:/usr/share/applications/mate-appearance-properties.desktop location:/usr/share/applications/libreoffice-writer.desktop location:/usr/share/applications/mate-terminal.desktop location:/usr/share/applications/pluma.desktop separator location:/usr/share/applications/ccsm.desktop location:/usr/share/applications/gimp.desktop separator location:/usr/share/applications/banshee.desktop location:/usr/share/applications/vlc.desktop





Set auto mount for all the partitions Besides the root partition, there are several other partitions in the hard drive of my laptop. These partitions are where I keep my important stuffs. And I hate it when I tried to access a file from an application, I realized that I forgot to mount these partitions. That's why I always prefer auto mounting all the partitions in my Linux box.

There are actually many ways to auto mount partitions in Linux, one of them is to use a tool called "pysdm". First, you need to install it:
sudo apt-get install pysdm

Next, open the terminal and run pysdm as root:
sudo pysdm

The configuration window of pysdm will appear, on which you just need to select the partition to configure:



After that, click on the Assistant button on the right and you will have a menu to customize the behavior of each partition. The option to auto mount partition at booting is the second one.



Just do that to all the partitions you want to mount at booting up and next time, you dont need to manually mount these partition anymore.


Hide the partition icons on the desktop
By default, the desktop of Linux Mint 13 always displays the icons of mounted partitions and USB drives and I think that makes the desktop ugly. I always want my desktop to be nice and clean. To hide these icons, hit Alt+F2 and type mateconf-editor then hit enter:



The MATE configuration window will appear. On which, you go to apps > caja > desktop then uncheck the volumes_visible option like the image below:



And you wont see these partition and usb icons on your desktop anymore.


Install Compiz Config Settings Manager
Compiz is an awesome tool, you can do a lot of cool things with it so I recommend everybody to install Compiz. You can tweak a lot of things with CCSM and of course, it is always fun to show the cubic desktops to your friends :D

To install Compiz, you can search for it in the Software Manager or run the following command:
sudo apt-get install compizconfig-settings-manager


Install Wine I myself at times need to run some Windows applications so Wine is always a must-have tool for me. To install Wine, you can search for it in the Software Manager or use this command:


sudo apt-get install wine .



TRICKS AFTER INSTALLING LINUX MINT MATE 13


1 - Edit the applications list in the Mint Menu

To customize the applications list, right click on the menu icon and select "Edit Menu"




The menu configuration window will open, on which you just need to check or uncheck the applications on the list to make them shown in the applications list:




2 - Make the Mint Menu always show the Favorites list when open

By default, the Mint Menu will show either the Favorites list or the Applications list when starting, depending on the last session. To make the Mint Menu always show the Favorite list when open, you hit Alt+F2 then type mateconf-editor to open the mate configuration window:



In the mate configuration window, you go to apps > MintMenu then check the line "start_with_favorites" and after that, the Mint Menu will always show the Favorites list when you open it up:





3 - Make the dictionary work

If you start the Dictionary of Linux Mint ( Menu> Office > Dictionary) you will see this error ( replace "lulz" with your username):



Fixing this error to make the dictionary work is very easy. Just hit Alt + F2 or open the terminal and run the following command:
mkdir .mate2

And you can use the dictionary now:





4 - Make the dictionary work offline

By default, the dictionary only works online but you can make it work offline easily with a little tweaking. Just open the terminal and run the following command:
sudo apt-get install dictd dict-gcide

Next, open the dictionary then go to Edit > Preferences



On Source tab of the the Preference window, click the Add button:



You will have the Add Dictionary Source window, just give it a description and change the hostname from dict.org into 127.0.0.1:



Click the Add button and you will go back to the Preferences window, on which you just need to select the Offline Dictionary Source to use the dictionary offline:





5 - Change the default folder of screenshots

When you take a screenshot in Linux Mint 13, a window will appear to ask you to save the screenshot. The default folder is the desktop. As I always want my desktop to be clean, I prefer a separate folder for the screenshots ( ~/Pictures/Screenshots). To change the screenshot folder, you hit Alt+F2, type mateconf-editor to open the Mate Configuration window. On which you go to apps > mate-screenshot then edit the line "last_save_directory":



After that, whenever you hit the Print screen key to take a screenshot, it will prompt you to save the image in the new folder:





6 - Enable fortune sayings in the terminal

In the older releases of Linux Mint ( for example: Linux Mint 11), when you open the terminal, an animal will appear and say some funny quotes. The applications to do that trick are fortune and cowsay. In Linux Mint 12 and 13, this feature is still included but disabled by default. Here is how to re-enable this feature:

Hit Alt+F2 and run "mintdesktop" and the desktop settings window will open. Select the Terminal tab and check the "Show fortune cookies" option:



After that, whenever you open the terminal, there will be a random quote appearing. Here is an example:




7 - Change the position of the notification pop-up

The default position of the notification pop up in Linux Mint 13 ( MATE) is the bottom right corner and I think it is quite unintuitive. I believe we normally pay more attention to the top of the screen than to the bottom.



To change the position of the notification popup, hit Alt+F2 and run " mate-notification-properties" to open the notification settings window. On that window you can select the theme and the position of the notification popup.



Here is the result, the notification popup got a new theme and a new position:




8 - Change the background of the file manager

If you still use the default Mint X theme, the color of the background of the file manager is white, which doesnt fit with the silver color of the theme, in my opinion. If you know what you are doing, you can edit the gtk theme. However, there is an easier way to change the background of the file manager.

Open the file manager then go to Edit > Backgrounds and Emblems:




The Backgrounds and Emblems window will open, on which you can choose either a pattern of a color for the background of the file manager. Just click on a pattern or a color and drag it into the file manager background. In the screenshot below, I use the Apparition color:








ADDITIONAL TRICKS



Pin Programs to the Panel


Frequently used programs can be easily pinned to the panel.
Browse to a program from Menu > Applications.
Drag and drop the program to an empty space in the panel, or right-click the program and select "Add to panel".
Right click the program icon, select "Move" and drop it to a new place in the panel.
Right click the program icon and select "Lock to Panel".



Set Fully Transparent Panel


When you set the panel to be transparent in the default Mint-X-Metal theme, you will find that some panel items' backgrounds are not transparent, but you can opt for one of the other themes, such as AuroraMint theme, which comes with the transparent background for the panel items. If you prefer the default theme with the items' backgrounds transparent, some tweaks are needed with the steps below:
Click Menu and select Terminal.
Enter cp -R /usr/share/themes/Mint-X-Metal ~/.themes/
Enter gedit ~/.themes/Mint-X-Metal/gtk-2.0/panel.rc to open the file with gedit.
Search for three instances of "Panel/panelbg.png"
Comment out all three lines by placing a # at the beginning of the lines, for example: # bg_pixmap[NORMAL] = ..., or # file = ...
Save the file.
Go to Menu > Applications > Preferences > Appearance, switch to the other theme and then back to the Mint-X-Metal theme.

Note: If you'd like to change to the Mint-X theme, replace Mint-X-Metal with Mint-X in the above command lines.


Set Preferences for the Start Menu


Like the Windows' Start button, Linux Mint has an advanced Gnome menu called "mintMenu" where you can start doing things like running a program, looking for files, log out or quit the system and so on.

This menu allows you to set your personal preferences with the steps below, for example:
Right click "Menu", select "Preferences".
In the "Main button" tab, remove the word "Menu" from the "Button text" box if you like to hide the text.
Change the keyboard shortcut from <Control>Super_L to others, such as Super_R, if you'd like to just press the right Windows key to get to the menu. (This change only takes effect after logging out and back in the system.)
Change the Button icon from /usr/lib/linuxmint/mintMenu/visualisation-logo.png to /usr/lib/linuxmint/mintMenu/mintMenu.png, as shown in the screenshot. (Caution: avoid changing to a huge size image which might affect the panel.)
In the Places tab, untick the items in "Toggle Default Places" to hide from the Menu.
In the System tab, untick the items in "Toggle Default Items" to hide from the Menu.

Other preferences can also be set in the Options, Theme, Applications and Favorites tabs.


Enable Superbar


In Windows 7, frequently used programs can be pinned to the taskbar (hence called Superbar). Likewise, DockBarX, a Gnome panel plugin, can be added to Linux Mint to achieve almost the same effect to pin and unpin or launch the applications from the panel.
Go to Menu > Software Manager > Edit > Software Source.
Select "Other Software" and click "Add"
At APT line, enter ppa:dockbar-main/ppa, click "Add Source" "Refresh" and "Close"
In the Software Manager window, enter dockbarx inside the Search box to look for dockbarx, which is available after the above steps.
Select Dockbarx and click "Install"
Log out and back into the system, then right click the panel and click “Add to Panel”.
Select the DockBarX Applet and click "Add".

Note: A thumbnail preview of a running program is also available to DockBarX. To enable this feature, right-click the DockBarX item on the panel, select Properties, choose Window List and tick "Show Previews". Other preferences such as appearance, window item and group button can also be configured by users.


Change Font Type and Color of Panel Clock


The font type and color of the panel clock follow the windows text in a theme by default. In particular, if the font color is black and shown on a dark background through a transparent panel, you can't read the clock clearly, but you can tweak it by changing the font color. And you can define the font type for your panel clock as well.

The code in Step 1 below sets the font color to white and applies Digital Face font (Note 1), bold and size 16.
Open up the text editor Gedit and paste the following code:
style "my-panel-clock"
{
fg[NORMAL] = "#FFFFFF"
font_name = "digital-7 bold 16"
}
widget "*.clock-applet-button.*" style "my-panel-clock"
Save the file as .gtkrc-2.0 (including the dot in front of the filename) inside your home directory /home/your_user_name.
Log out and log back in (OR enter killall gnome-panel into the Terminal) to see the change.

Note 1: The Digital Face font can be downloaded here. After downloading, unzip the file, enter sudo mv digital-7.ttf /usr/share/fonts/truetype into Terminal to move the font file to the restricted folder. See also Install Extra Fonts.

Note 2: The filename leading by a dot represents it's a hidden file and visible by toggling the key Ctrl-H in the Nautilus file browser.


Open Up a Window in Center


When running an application without maximized, Linux Mint always puts it in the left-top corner of the desktop by default, but you are allowed to set a program window to open up in the center of the desktop area.
Press Alt+F2 to bring up "Run Application" window.
Type ccsm into the box and click Run to bring up CompizConfig Settings Manager.
Select "Windows Management" from the left panel.
Click "Place Windows".
Change Placement Mode from "Smart" to "Centered", click "Back" and "Close".

Ideally, the window manager in Linux Mint should restore the last known position of an application window, but it does not do that unless an application remembers its own window position.


Roll Up and Down a Window


When you double-click the title bar of a window, the default setting is to maximize a window. Since there's already a maximize button you can use for this, I always like to change the default setting to rolling up (or 'shading') a window when I double-click on its title bar.
Go to Menu > Control Center > Personal
Click "Windows" to open up "Window Preferences".
In "Titlebar Action", select "Roll up" (or "Shade") from the drop-down list.

Now you can roll up a window when you double-click its title bar, and roll it down by double-clicking the title bar again. Simple as that.


Customize the Theme


Linux Mint is using the Mint-X-Metal as the default theme, but you can either select one of the other available themes or customize it to suit your preferences easily.
Go to Menu > Applications > Perferences > Appearance
Select the other theme, for instance AuroraMint, and your window will reflect the changes to the new theme.
Click the "Customize" button.
Select one of the tabs, such as Icons.
Choose one of the icon packages, for example, Elementary Mint, and click the "Close" button.
Now it becomes your Custom theme and you can save it as a new theme, such as "AuroraMint with Elementary Icons".


Set Aero Glass Effect


In Linux Mint you can set nearly the same aero glass effect to window borders with alpha transparency as available in Windows 7.
Press Alt+F2 to bring up "Run Application" window.
Type gconf-editor into the box, click "Run" to bring up Configuration Editor.
Browse to apps > gwd, look for "metacity_theme_active_opacity" on the right panel.
Change the value in "metacity_theme_active_opacity" from 1 to 0.75 (or smaller such as 0.5 for more transparency).
Then go to Menu > Applications > Preferences > CompizConfig Settings Manager.
Select "Effects" from the left panel.
Tick "Blur Windows" and click the "Close" button. (Note: default values in Blur Windows can be applied.)

Note: If the aero glass effect doesn't work, check if you have updated your display driver. Go to Menu > Applications > Administration > Additional Drivers, activate the recommended graphics driver and restart the system.


Enable Aero Snap (Linux Mint 10 only)


In Windows 7, you can click and drag a window to the left or right edge of the desktop and it will fill half of the screen, or snap a window to the top edge of the desktop and it will be maximized.

In Linux Mint 11, you can click and drag a window to the left, right or top edge of the desktop to achieve the same result, but in Linux Mint 10, you need some tweaking as follows.
Go to Menu > Software Manager, type wmctrl into the Search box and press "Enter".
Select "wmctrl" and click "Install" if it has not been installed.
Go To Menu > Applications > Preferences > CompizConfig Settings Manager.
Select "General" from the left panel and click "Commands".
In Command line 0, 1 and 2, paste the following codes:
Command line 0, paste WIDTH=`xdpyinfo | grep 'dimensions:' | cut -f 2 -d ':' | cut -f 1 -d 'x'` && HALF=$(($WIDTH/2)) && wmctrl -r :ACTIVE: -b add,maximized_vert && wmctrl -r :ACTIVE: -e 0,0,0,$HALF,-1
Command line 1, paste WIDTH=`xdpyinfo | grep 'dimensions:' | cut -f 2 -d ':' | cut -f 1 -d 'x'` && HALF=$(($WIDTH/2)) && wmctrl -r :ACTIVE: -b add,maximized_vert && wmctrl -r :ACTIVE: -e 0,$HALF,0,$HALF,-1
Command line 2, paste wmctrl -r :ACTIVE: -b add,maximized_vert,maximized_horz
In the same window, click "Edge Bindings" tab.
Change Run Command 0, 1 and 2 from "None" to "Left", "Right" and "Top" respectively.
Click "Back" button and select "General Options", change "Edge Trigger Delay" to about 500.


Hide Drive Icons on the Desktop


In addition to the Computer and Home icons, Linux Mint adds an icon to the desktop for every removable drive that you attach to your system. The icons can be hidden by these steps:
Press Alt+F2 to bring up "Run Application" window.
Type gconf-editor into the box, click "Run" to bring up Configuration Editor.
Browse to apps > nautilus > desktop.
Untick "computer_icon_visible", "home_icon_visible" and "volumes_visible" and close the window.

As an alternative if Desktop Settings is available, you can go to Menu > Preferences > Desktop Settings > Desktop, then untick Computer, Home and Mounted Volumes.

The drive icons as well as Computer and Home icons would then disappear from the desktop. Remember that you can always access the drives from Menu > Places.


Change Wallpapers Automatically


You can right click your desktop, select "Change Desktop Background" and choose any one of the wallpapers pre-installed, but you need to do it each time you want to change a wallpaper. What about changing a wallpaper automatically within a certain time interval? Try Wally.
Go to Menu > Software Manager, enter wally into the Search box and click "Install". (Note)
Press Alt-F2, enter wally and click the "Run" button.
Right-click the Wally icon on the panel, select Settings.
Click "Folders" in the left column, then add /usr/share/backgrounds to the Folder box and tick "Include subfolders".
Click "Settings" in the left column, then tick "Play automatically on application starts".
Set the application to auto start, using this tip Auto Start Up an Application (as Wally's option to "Start automatically when system starts" being disabled).

Your wallpaper on the desktop will automatically change following these basic settings when you log back in the system (or right click the Wally icon on the panel and select "Play").

Note: If you like to get the latest version of Wally which has an option to disable splash screen and auto quit, go to developer's site to download. After which, right click the .deb file and select "Open with GDebi Package Installer" to install, then follow Step 2 above.


Set a Default View in File Manager


Windows Explorer allows for users to set a default view to all folders. In almost the same way, Linux Mint's Nautilus File Browser allows for these settings:
Go to "Places" and open a folder.
At the top of the File Browser, click "Edit" and "Preference".
Under Default View, change "Icon View" to "List View", to see more details in columns.
Tick "Show hidden and backup files" if that's your choice.

Other various settings, such as single or double click to open items, icon captions, list columns, preview files and media handling can be done in the same window as well.


Create an Advanced File Manager


In the Mint file system, you can use Nautilus file manager to browse most files but can only write files in your home folder /home/your_name and its sub-folders such as Desktop and Documents. If you have to rename a folder or write files outside of your home folder using the file manager, you won't be able to but you can create an advanced file manager for this purpose.
Go to Menu > Applications > Preferences > Main Menu
Select "Accessories" in the left panel and click "New Item" in the right panel.
Enter a name such as Advanced Nautilus in the "Name" box.
Enter gksu nautilus in the "Command" box.
Click the "OK" button and the "Close" button.

Now you can go to Menu > Applications > Accessories and see that the Advanced Nautilus is ready for use. But be careful since you can use it to delete or change any files on your system.


Add or Change Keyboard Shortcuts


Keyboard shortcuts are preset in the system, but you can add new ones or change them easily. For instance, change the default shortcut Ctrl+Alt+T (Run a Terminal) to Win+R (press R while holding down the Windows key, also known as Super key) by the following steps:
Go To System > Preferences > Keyboard Shortcuts
Browse to Desktop > "Run a terminal"
Click on the Shortcut, and it shows "New shortcut..."
Press Win+R, and it shows Mod4+R
Click the Close button and try the new shortcut.

Note 1: To disable a shortcut, press Backspace when it shows "New shortcut..." after the step 3 above.

Note 2: Shortcuts begin with XF86 refer to special keys available to some multimedia keyboards.

Note 3: Keyboard shortcuts can also be set by changing keybinding values with Configuration Editor. Press Alt+F2 and enter gconf-editor, then navigate to apps > gnome_settings_daemon > keybindings, or apps > metacity > global_keybindings and window_keybindings.


Terminate Unresponsive Programs


Xkill is part of the X11 utilities pre-installed in Linux Mint and a tool for terminating misbehaving X clients or unresponsive programs. You can easily add a shortcut key to launch xkill with the steps below.
Go to Menu > Applications > Preferences > Keyboard Shortcuts.
Click the Add button to create a custom shortcut.
Enter xkill to both the Name and Command boxes and click the Apply button.
Click on Disabled at the xkill row in the Keyboard Shortcuts window (Disabled is then changed to New shortcut...).
Press a new key combination, e.g. Ctrl+Alt+X (New shortcut... is then changed to Ctrl+Alt+X).
Click the Close button.

Xkill is ready for use. Press the above key combination to turn the cursor to an X-sign, move the X-sign and drop it into a program interface to terminate the unresponsive program, or cancel the X-sign with a right-click.

Note: As an alternative, you can right-click the panel, select "Add to panel", then choose "Force Quit" to add to the panel. This works similarly to the above but it's activated from a button on the panel instead of the keyboard shortcut.


Re-start System without Rebooting


If you press Ctrl+Alt+Delete, Linux Mint brings you a menu to shut down, restart, or suspend your system. But for some reason you might encounter that the system freezes, the mouse cursor can't move, neither pressing Ctrl+Alt+Delete can work.

Remember that there's a shortcut key Alt+PrintScreen+K that can bring you back to the log-in screen immediately without the need to reboot the system. That's a time saver.

As an alternative, you can also use Ctrl+Alt+Backspace to do the same. If this shortcut key is disabled, you can easily enable it by the following steps:
Go to System > Preferences > Keyboard.
Select the “Layouts” tab and click the “Options” button.
Select “Key sequence to kill the X server” and enable “Control + Alt + Backspace”.


Set Sound Output


If you use a PC with an integrated audio device and it has no sound when playing a media file on a player, try these simple steps to set Sound Preferences for your PC. It works for me for the audio device I have.
Go to Menu > Applications > Preferences > Sound to bring up the Sound Preferences window.
Under the Hardware tab, change Profile to Analog Stereo Duplex from the drop-down menu.
Under the Output tab, change Connector to Analog Output (LFE)/Amplifier from the drop-down menu.

As the items available from the drop-down menus might differ depending on the hardware devices detected by the system, you might want to try other items in the menus to see if they work for your devices.


Disable or Change Login Sound


Each time when you login to Linux Mint, it plays a login sound. If you don't like to listen to it each time you login, you can easily disable it, or you can even change it to your favorite sound.

To disable the login sound:
Go to Menu > Applications > Preferences > Startup Applications.
Under the "Startup Programs" tab, untick "GNOME Login Sound"
Click Close

To change the login sound, tick the above "GNOME Login Sound" if it's unticked, then follow these steps:
Press Alt+F2 to bring up "Run Application" window.
Paste gksu nautilus /usr/share/sounds/LinuxMint/stereo into the box, click "Run" to open Nautilus in the right folder.
Rename the original file desktop-login.ogg to another such as desktop-login-original.ogg for backup.
Copy your sound file in ogg format to the above folder and name the file as desktop-login.ogg
Log out and log back in to listen to the new login sound.


Install Extra Fonts


Do you prefer Windows TrueType fonts to the default fonts installed by Linux Mint? The mscorefonts package containing most Microsoft fonts can be installed and configured easily in a few steps below:
Go to Menu > Terminal.
Paste sudo apt-get install ttf-mscorefonts-installer into the Terminal (by pressing Ctrl-Shift-V in the Terminal after copying the highlighted code).
Go to Menu > Applications > Preferences > Appearance > Fonts.
Click each of them, pick a font and size to configure for window title and so on.

How about installing more TrueType fonts? With your font files, you can manually add them into the system following the steps below:
Press Alt+F2 to bring up "Run Application" window.
Paste gksu nautilus /usr/share/fonts/truetype into the box, click "Run" to open Nautilus in the right folder.
Create a new sub-folder and copy your files ending with .ttf into the sub-folder.
Enter sudo fc-cache -f -v in the Terminal to rebuild the font information.

Besides this, you can run an application such as Font-Manager to view, install, remove fonts and so on.

Note: If you like the Tahoma font which is not included in the mscorefonts package, you might want to copy the two files tahoma.ttf and tahomabd.ttf from /Windows/Fonts and install them.


Install Screenlets


Screenlets are small applications to represent things such as sticky notes, clocks, calendars around on your desktop. You can launch a pre-installed screenlet from Screenlet Manager, or install a new one into the Manager for launching it. Here are the steps for installing and launching a screenlet, for example, WaterMark System Information.
Install Screenlets Manager if it has not been added.
Go to Menu > Software Manager.
Enter screenlets into the Search Box.
Select Screenlets, click the "Install" button.
Download the screenlet "WaterMark System Information" to a folder.
Go to Menu > Applications > Accessories > Screenlets.
Click Install, select Install Screenlet and click OK.
Browse to the folder, select the file downloaded and click "Open" to install the screenlet into the Screenlets Manager.
Select the screenlet "WaterMark" and click "Launch/Add". (Tips: you can add more than one WaterMark screenlet and set it to display other system information.)

More screenlets are available for installation from screenlets.org.


Add More Useful Software


Linux Mint's Software Manager lets you search and get free software, or straight from the Menu, you can type an application name into the Search box to see if the software has been installed and ready for use. If it's not, you can click "Install package..." to install it if the available software package is shown in the panel. What's more? you can also go to Menu > Package Manager, type in an application name to search and install a software package from the repositories.

Alternatively, you can get the latest freeware applications by clicking the Install this now button from the GetDeb Repository after the getdeb package is installed with the instructions given.

See also our Best Free Software for Linux.


Auto Mount Drives at System Startup


Linux Mint is capable of reading and writing files stored on Windows formatted partitions, but partitions must be 'mounted' before they can be accessed each time you start up the system. With these steps, you can auto mount the drives or partitions without the need to manually mount them for access.
Go to Menu > Software Manager, type pysdm into the Search box and press "Enter".
Select "pysdm" and click "Install" if it has not been installed.
Go to Menu > Applications > Administration > Storage Device Manager.
Extend the list of sda and select the sda you want to auto mount, click 'OK' to configure.
Click the "Assistant" button.
Uncheck "Mount file system in read only mode" and keep "The file system is mounted at boot time" checked.
Click the "Mount", "Apply" then "Close" button, and restart the system.

In case you wish to remove the auto-mount of a certain drive or partition, you can similarly use Storage Device Manager to do the setting.

Note: If you need to identify disk partitions by label, paste ls /dev/disk/by-label -g in Terminal, or to view partition sizes and file systems, enter sudo fdisk -l. Disk Utility mentioned in "Name or Label a Partition" also gives you a glance of device numbers, partition types, sizes and labels.


Manually Mount a USB Drive


A USB storage device plugged into the system usually mounts automatically, but if for some reasons it doesn't automount, it's possible to manually mount it with these steps.
Go to Menu > Terminal.
Enter sudo mkdir /media/usb to create a mount point called usb.
Enter sudo fdisk -l to look for the USB drive already plugged in, let's say the drive you want to mount is /dev/sdb1.
Enter sudo mount -t vfat /dev/sdb1 /media/usb -o uid=1000,gid=100,utf8,dmask=027,fmask=137 to mount a USB drive formatted with FAT16 or FAT32 system. OR:
Enter sudo mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sdb1 /media/usb to mount a USB drive formatted with NTFS system.

To unmount it, just enter sudo umount /media/usb in the Terminal.


Name or Label a Partition


Nautilus file manager shows the root directory as File System for your Mint system partition. If you have other partitions (or volumes), it shows them as xx GB Filesystem if they’re not named or labelled.

Using Disk Utility is one of the effective ways to name a partition easily:
Install Disk Utility if it has not been added.
Go to Menu > Software Manager.
Enter gnome-disk-utility into the Search Box.
Select gnome-disk-utility, click the "Install" button.
Go to Menu > Applications > Administration > Disk Utility
Select the item Hard Disk.
In the Volumes section, click a partition you want to label.
Click "Edit Filesystem Label" (Note 1)
In the Label box, enter a name, e.g. Data-Disk, and click Apply.

The file manager should now show the partition label, such as Data-Disk, instead of xx GB Filesystem.

Note 1: If the option for "Edit Filesystem Label" is not shown, click "Unmount Volume" before hand. In case you can't unmount a volume, try Storage Device Manager to unmount it. See Auto Mount Drives at System Startup.

Note 2: This tip is for naming a partition using Disk Utility, use other advanced features such as format, edit or delete partition with caution as they can delete data on your disk.


Auto Start Up an Application


In Windows, you can place a program shortcut in a startup folder for running a program automatically when the system starts. In Linux Mint, you can do the same in this way:
Go To Menu > Applications > Preferences > Startup Applications
Click the "Add" button.
Name a program.
Click the "Browse" button and navigate to File System > usr > bin, where programs are usually installed.
Select a program, click the "Open" button followed by the "Add" button.

The above program will then be listed in additional startup programs. Check if the program runs automatically by logging out and back to the system.


Change Default Boot Options


After full installation, Linut Mint is set to be the default operating system to boot up if no key is pressed within a few seconds on a multi-boot system. You might want to set your preferred operating system to boot up by default. This can be done easily with StartUp-Manager.
Go to Menu > Applications > Administration > StartUp-Manager
Enter password to perform pre-configuration tasks, which include searching bootloaders to operating systems.
Select the default operating system from the pull-down menu, click "Close" to perform post-configuration tasks.

With StartUp-Manager, you can also do others such as manage Usplash themes, adjust bootloader menu resolution or set timeout in seconds. Avoid changing timeout to 0 seconds if you need to select a system to boot up from a multi-boot menu.

Note: If your startup splash logo is changed to text after applying a graphics driver, the StartUp-Manager can be used to change the text back to the logo by adjusting to higher resolution and color depth supported by the driver.


Remove Old Linux Kernel, Clean Up Boot Menu


Each time when Linux Mint updates to a new Linux kernel, the old one is left behind and the boot menu gets longer. If your new Linux kernel works well, it's safe to remove the old one and clean up the boot menu. Do take these steps carefully as incorrect removal of the items can make your system unbootable.
Go to Menu > Terminal.
Enter uname -r to print the Linux kernel version you're running (e.g. 2.6.32-22-generic).
Go to Menu > Package Manager.
Click Status from the left panel and select Installed.
Enter the main version number (e.g. 2.6.32) in the Search box.
Right-click the items with smaller sub version number (e.g. 2.6.32-21) for older Linux kernel and select Mark for Complete Removal. The files for the older version to remove may include linux-headers-2.6.32-21, linux-headers-2.6.32-21-generic and linux-image-2.6.32-21-generic.
Click Apply from the top panel.
Click Apply again from the pop-up window to confirm removal of the marked packages. The boot menu will be cleaned up automatically after the removal is confirmed.

Note: Try also Grub Customizer which can be used to hide items from the boot menu. Just install the program by entering the following in the Terminal, then run the program, untick the items you want to hide and click 'Save'.
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:danielrichter2007/grub-customizer
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install grub-customizer


Auto Shutdown the System


A simple command can be entered in the Terminal to schedule a time for the system to shut down.
Go Menu > Terminal.
Enter sudo shutdown -h +m (replace m with the number of minutes, e.g. +60).
OR: enter sudo shutdown -h hh:mm (replace hh:mm with the time on the 24hr clock, e.g. 23:15).
Enter password and minimize the Terminal window.

The system will then shut down within the minutes or at the time specified. To cancel a scheduled time, enter sudo shutdown -c in the Terminal.

Alternatively, you might want to download and install GShutdown, which is a GUI program for scheduling a time to shutdown the system...


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