On Wed, 6 Nov 2013 10:00:34 +0100 (CET), Pierre Frenkiel
wrote:
>What remains unexplained is that I had the 3.10-3-686-pae kernel
>on my old install, and I never enabled multiarch (At that time, I even
> ignored
>this possibility).Is there an other explanation than Alzheimer?
>
Pierre Frenkiel:
> On Fri, 25 Oct 2013, Jochen Spieker wrote:
>
> What remains unexplained is that I had the 3.10-3-686-pae kernel
> on my old install, and I never enabled multiarch (At that time, I even ignored
> this possibility).Is there an other explanation than Alzheimer?
None that I am awa
On Fri, 25 Oct 2013, Jochen Spieker wrote:
You do not need PAE with an AMD64 installation and your 64 Bit system
will not boot using a 32 Bit kernel. If you really, really want to have
a 686-PAE kernel then you need to enable multiarch.
hi Jochan,
thanks for your comments. I wanted to fini
Pierre Frenkiel:
>
> I had on my laptop the kernel 3.10-3-686-pae. After re-installing wheezy,
> all pae kernels became invisible, i.e I only get, with
>aptitude search linux-image.
>
> p linux-image-2.6-amd64 p linux-image-3.10-0.bpo.2-amd64 p
> linux-image-3.10-0.bpo.2-amd64-dbg p
> linu
Pierre Frenkiel wrote:
> I had on my laptop the kernel 3.10-3-686-pae. After re-installing wheezy,
> all pae kernels became invisible, i.e I only get, with
>aptitude search linux-image.
> p linux-image-2.6-amd64 p linux-image-3.10-0.bpo.2-amd64 p
> ...
You appear to have installed the amd6
hi,
I had on my laptop the kernel 3.10-3-686-pae. After re-installing wheezy,
all pae kernels became invisible, i.e I only get, with
aptitude search linux-image.
p linux-image-2.6-amd64
p linux-image-3.10-0.bpo.2-amd64
p linux-image-3.10-0.bpo.2-amd64-dbg
p linux-image-3.10-0.bpo.2-
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