this post was submitted on 18 Nov 2023
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Discussion around the Framework mission of building products that last longer by making them upgradeable, customizable, and repairable. Consumer electronics can be better for you and for the environment.
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Mint is effectively Ubuntu 22.04 LTS. Treat it as such and it should be fine. The main differences are Cinnamon, Mate, or Xfce instead of the horrid Gnome and flatpak instead of snaps. I'd expect the Framework directions to get 22.04 LTS working to also work on Mint.
Mint does have an 'edge' iso, using Ubuntu's newer '-edge' packages from 22.04 LTS.
Ensuring you have the latest Framework BIOS is also helpful - Its known to have solved some people's issues.
Beyond Fedora 39, other distros are not "officially" supported by Framework in part because there's countless many of them, partly because some of them are either 'rolling releases' or quite short term (Ubuntu non-LTS releases are EOL after 9 months). The "long list of instructions" Framework offers for Ubuntu 22.04 LTS is for this reason - Its stable, reliable, and well supported overall but also nearly 2 years old so lacking in support for 2023 hardware. As a workaround you could try Ubuntu 23.10, upgrading that to 24.04 LTS next April - It would be based off packages mostly from spring/summer 2023.
I don't have a FW13 AMD, but do have FW16+dGPU on order. It will be running Mint Cinnamon Edition. Not especially concerned about issues.. I have no problem building my own kernels if need be (I already do that anyway to use current stable releases - 6.6.1 currently) and do use certain PPAs (kisak-fresh and Rob Savoury's archives - I do kick a few bucks his way for private repo access) to bring Mint 21.2 much more current than stock Ubuntu 22.04 LTS.