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I went to Ubuntu and went to the download page, chose 32 bit, for an older machine, made a CD. When everything was said and done, I have Linux Mint 16 on the machine....how did that happen? I'm new to Linux, but I can't find anywhere that it says this is what I was downloading. Is it because I chose 32 bit? Is it a screw up in the mirror? Any help is appreciated.

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    Where did you download it from? Ubuntu doesn't provide Mint images, is it possible you were on the Mint site instead?
    – Thomas Ward
    Oct 19, 2014 at 22:56
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    The correct place to download Ubuntu is ubuntu.com/download. Is this the site you downloaded it from? Oct 19, 2014 at 23:06
  • ubuntu.com/download/desktop specifically. I've looked at the image file and it even says ubuntu, but once the CD is loaded, it's desktop background says Linux Mint 16
    – Felix
    Oct 19, 2014 at 23:16
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    Then it must be magic! :~) Oct 19, 2014 at 23:39
  • This is kind of a long shot, but is it possible that this person has Ubuntu installed but their desktop wallpaper is set to one of the Mint ones? Ie, could there have been any Mint wallpapers included with the Mate or Cinnamon packages or other packages which originate from Mint? Oct 20, 2014 at 4:09

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A mirror is automatically selected when you download Ubuntu at http://www.ubuntu.com/download or http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop. That's usually a very good way to get Ubuntu, but some problems, potentially including a wrong file on a mirror, can be solved by downloading directly from http://releases.ubuntu.com. I strongly suspect that will fix this for you, if the problem is really that your ISO image is for Mint.

You can also download with bittorrent.

To figure out what happened, I recommend very carefully checking through all the steps you carried out while burning the CD, in case you accidentally selected the wrong ISO image. Some CD/DVD burning software has confusing interfaces. (This is of course less likely to be the cause, if you have not ever previously downloaded a Mint image.)

If you'd written the ISO to a USB stick instead of burning it to a disc, I'd suggest making sure you didn't accidentally select the wrong option in the program you used to do that. For example, UNetbootin has an option to specify what OS to write to the USB stick. However, I don't know of any CD/DVD burning programs with similar functionality (and thus am mentioning this primarily for the benefit of others who may find this question while searching for help with a related problem).

If you wish to investigate this further, you can check that your ISO image is really the Ubuntu ISO you want it to be--and that it has not been corrupted--by calculating the md5sum of the ISO image and checking it against the appropriate ISO image's MD5 hash.

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