Linux Mint, a popular desktop distribution, is considering a longer development cycle to allow for more ambitious improvements. Lead developer Clement Lefebvre explained that frequent releases limit the team's ambitions. The next version will follow Ubuntu 26.04 but retain X11 as the default display system.
Linux Mint's lead developer, Clement "Clem" Lefebvre, has announced plans to slow the distribution's release cadence. In a recent update, Lefebvre stated that while frequent releases have worked well, they result in "these incremental improvements release after release. But it takes a lot of time, and it caps our ambition when it comes to development." The project aims to adopt a longer cycle to enable more substantial advancements.
The upcoming Linux Mint release, expected shortly after Ubuntu 26.04 in April 2026, will differ from its base. Unlike Ubuntu, which is shifting to Wayland by default, Mint will continue using the X11 window system "as long as it works best for most users." Lefebvre described current Wayland support in Mint's Cinnamon desktop as "experimental," with the team planning to test it as a potential solution without forcing it on users. A key development is a new Cinnamon screensaver that renders natively under both X11 and Wayland, providing smoother lock animations and full Wayland compatibility.
Other enhancements include a new Administration Tool called mintsysadm, which centralizes user and account management. This tool will support home directory encryption for new users on existing systems, previously limited to installation time. It also improves avatar setup with webcam live previews, mirroring options, and HiDPI support.
Mint's independence is bolstered by strong community support. In December 2025, the project received $47,312 in donations from 1,393 donors, described by Lefebvre as "unprecedented" and "humbling." Additionally, 2,017 Patreon patrons contribute $4,900 monthly. These funds have enabled infrastructure upgrades, such as enhancing the forum server to handle AI bot traffic with 10 times the CPU and double the bandwidth.
This approach aligns with Mint's philosophy of stability and user-focused evolution, rejecting technologies like Canonical's Snap packaging and prioritizing long-term support bases.