A PCMag expert who tested Linux Mint on a live USB drive found it superior to Windows 11 in several areas, including cost, performance, and privacy. While acknowledging some limitations, the author recommends it for users seeking a free, open-source alternative. The article details benefits like minimal hardware needs and a clutter-free interface.
Michael Muchmore, a veteran software tester at PCMag, explored Linux Mint as an alternative to Windows 11 after a year of underwhelming Microsoft updates. He installed the popular Linux distribution on a live USB drive for risk-free testing, noting its Windows-like interface eases the transition for users.
The first advantage is price: Linux Mint is completely free to download, with no license fees, unlike Windows 11's $139 Home Edition or $199 Pro Edition for standalone purchases. System requirements are minimal, running on 64-bit AMD- or Intel-based systems with just 2GB RAM and a 3GB installer—far leaner than Windows 11 or macOS Tahoe. This efficiency allows Mint to perform better on older hardware due to fewer background processes like telemetry.
Muchmore praises the cleaner interface, with simple panels avoiding Windows 11's cluttered Start menu, which includes sidebars, app clusters, and recommendations. The Files app supports regular expression searching, and keyboard shortcuts match Windows, such as the Windows key opening the main menu.
Customization stands out with three distinct flavors—Cinnamon, MATE, and Xfce—offering varied desktop environments, more dramatic than Windows' Home and Pro differences. Live USB support is available to all users, not just enterprises as with Windows, though default sessions lose settings unless a persistent partition is added.
Linux Mint lacks built-in AI like Copilot, appealing to those avoiding OS-level assistants, though web access to tools like ChatGPT remains possible. Privacy is enhanced with minimal telemetry; data is sent only via the voluntary System Reports Tool, unlike Windows' persistent collection.
Trade-offs include incompatibility with major software like Adobe Creative Cloud and Microsoft 365 desktop apps, limited hardware drivers, no phone integration, and occasional command-line use. Muchmore concludes it's ideal for browser-based work or open-source alternatives, worth testing for those not reliant on proprietary tools.