Linux Mint 22.3 not officially released yet

The ISO for Linux Mint 22.3 is available from mirrors, but the distribution has not been officially released to the public. According to a recent advisory, the full release is expected in a day or two.

A post from the Linux community account itsfoss2 on January 13, 2026, cautions users against assuming Linux Mint 22.3 is ready for widespread use. While the installation ISO can be downloaded from official mirrors, it remains unofficial until the formal announcement.

"📣 FYI, Linux Mint 22.3 is NOT officially released yet! Yes, the ISO is available from the mirrors but it's not released to public yet. It should arrive in a day or two," the post states.

This heads-up aims to prevent confusion among users eager for the update, ensuring they wait for the stable public version. Linux Mint, a popular user-friendly distribution based on Ubuntu, typically follows a structured release process to maintain reliability.

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Illustration of Ubuntu 26.04 LTS 'Resolute Raccoon' launch featuring laptop desktop with kernel 7.0, Wayland, and official flavors.
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Ubuntu 26.04 LTS releases with Linux kernel 7.0

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Canonical has launched Ubuntu 26.04 LTS, codenamed Resolute Raccoon, featuring Linux kernel 7.0 and a shift to Wayland across variants. Official flavors including Kubuntu and Lubuntu accompany the main release with updated desktops and hardware support. The LTS version promises five years of updates until April 2031.

Linux Mint has released Hardware Enablement (HWE) ISO images for version 22.3—based on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS—featuring Linux kernel 6.17 instead of the standard 6.14. This follows Ubuntu's February 2026 HWE update for 24.04.4 LTS, providing the same kernel via updates; Mint's ISOs now ensure compatibility for very new hardware right from installation, with more HWE ISOs planned until Linux Mint 23 arrives in December 2026.

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The upcoming Ubuntu 26.04 LTS release links to release notes for nine official flavors instead of the previous ten. Ubuntu MATE is absent from the list amid maintainer challenges. Developers argue that a smaller lineup strengthens the distribution's focus and sustainability.

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