On Mon, Mar 15, 2010 at 8:06 PM, Brad Rogers <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Mon, 15 Mar 2010 19:48:37 +0000
> Angus Hedger <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Hello Angus,
>
>> When you get a new kernel via apt the old one is not removed,
>
> In the past, the new kernel has been made the default kernel, and placed
> at the top of the selection list.  For some reason, that wasn't the case
> this time.
>
> Not a big deal, but not what I expected.  This was on an AMD64 machine,
> although I wouldn't have thought that made any difference.
>
> --
>  Regards  _
>         / )           "The blindingly obvious is
>        / _)rad        never immediately apparent"
>
> What will you do when the gas taps turn?
> The Gasman Cometh - Crass
>

Hey,

I did notice that myself (Also a AMD64 machine), this kernel update
also caused me more problems with X than before (had to roll back to
nv driver and clean out my xorg.conf before I could get it to boot
enough to get into the terminal, for some reason my keyboard wasnt
being detected! )

Regards,

Angus


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