Ok, so LAN networking between Linux computers IS standard (out of the box) and you can set up SSHFS or NFS (or Samba) on a per-linux user basis very easily. (indeed there are a bunch of UI tools to assist with this)
Depending on your UI, KDE for example provides a "sharing" tab in the file manager which sets up file sharing via Samba and indeed walks you through installing Samba if it's not installed - maybe try Ubuntu if Mint has a problem, not all Linux distributions are created equal ...
Do you mean t...
Ok, so LAN networking between Linux computers IS standard (out of the box) and you can set up SSHFS or NFS (or Samba) on a per-linux user basis very easily. (indeed there are a bunch of UI tools to assist with this)Depending on your UI, KDE for example provides a "sharing" tab in the file manager which sets up file sharing via Samba and indeed walks you through installing Samba if it's not installed - maybe try Ubuntu if Mint has a problem, not all Linux distributions are created equal ...
Do you mean t...
Depending on your UI, KDE for example provides a "sharing" tab in the file manager which sets up file sharing via Samba and indeed walks you through installing Samba if it's not installed - maybe try Ubuntu if Mint has a problem, not all Linux distributions are created equal ...
Do you mean t...