Yes the Mint trial version is free for 3 months, then you have to create a Linux account and signup on their website to purchase activation key for the full upgrade to unlock changing themes and recieving updates unless you’re okay with occasional popup reminders every 2-minutes that your Linux copy has not been activated.
/s lol
I hear you can extend the free trial by telling random people you use Arch. Just what I’ve heard. Linux Mint started the same program from what I gather.
Actually for many people rolling release is a cure for that issue because it’s the extensive version upgrades (that also like to fail) which often gets people to the point of reinstalling then trying another distro while being at it.
Yes the Mint trial version is free for 3 months, then you have to create a Linux account and signup on their website to purchase activation key for the full upgrade to unlock changing themes and recieving updates unless you’re okay with occasional popup reminders every 2-minutes that your Linux copy has not been activated. /s lol
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 I laughed way too hard at this ☠️
Holy fuck. I am someone with Win 10 and was thinking about trying Linux Mint and then your post made me say WTF, should I investigate something else?
I’m glad the /s was added because it seemed wrong, but then I was second guessing. Absolutely hilarious though! Got me to laugh after.
There’s a package called
activate-linux
that puts the activation warning overlay on the screen in case you ever feel homesick.…and there’s Ubuntu advertising its pro subscription in the terminal.
That’s too fuckin funny
Just so you know, the Arch free trial is 6 months
I hear you can extend the free trial by telling random people you use Arch. Just what I’ve heard. Linux Mint started the same program from what I gather.
That explains sooooooooooooooooo much
Because that is the maximum time an average Linux user can stand without trying out a new Distro.
Actually for many people rolling release is a cure for that issue because it’s the extensive version upgrades (that also like to fail) which often gets people to the point of reinstalling then trying another distro while being at it.
I’m using the same arch install on my home server for 10 years now.
You’re not wrong…
Had me in the first half…