Re: [Lubuntu-qa] Linux Kernel and the Future of Lubuntu

2013-06-16 Thread Leszek Lesner
Am Donnerstag, 13. Juni 2013, 16:20:02 schrieb Ali Linx: > Hi, > > I always prefer to think and plan ahead and I'm sure you all agree this is > a good idea. "Better safe than sorry" :) > > Having that said, I'm sure you all know that we are in 2013 and Linux > Kernel starting from series 3.xx and

Re: [Lubuntu-qa] Linux Kernel and the Future of Lubuntu

2013-06-13 Thread Yorvyk
On 13/06/13 13:20, Ali Linx (amjjawad) wrote: Hi, I always prefer to think and plan ahead and I'm sure you all agree this is a good idea. "Better safe than sorry" :) Having that said, I'm sure you all know that we are in 2013 and Linux Kernel starting from series 3.xx and later, started to dro

Re: [Lubuntu-qa] Linux Kernel and the Future of Lubuntu

2013-06-13 Thread Phill Whiteside
All the isos (even long Expired ones) are archived up [1]. Ubuntu does not force someone using, say, 8.04 to upgrade. All that happens is they no longer get updates from ubuntu. If there is another swathe of CPU's that are dropped, we will mention that on the Wiki, just as we do for 10.04 Regards,

Re: [Lubuntu-qa] Linux Kernel and the Future of Lubuntu

2013-06-13 Thread Jörn Schönyan
We don't have to care about 386 machines, I think. We DO care about machines without PAE-extension, that should be enough. Jörn Hi Phill, I'm afraid you did not understand my email correctly. This is not what I was expecting :) BACK to archive: "we keep Lubuntu 10.04 because the drop of

Re: [Lubuntu-qa] Linux Kernel and the Future of Lubuntu

2013-06-13 Thread Ali Linx (amjjawad)
On Thu, Jun 13, 2013 at 4:50 PM, Phill Whiteside wrote: > The kernel on the release iso will never change (nor will ANYTHING else). > Release ISO's are specifically frozen in time, for all time. This is why on > LTS when a new iso is created it has a .1, .2, .3 and .4 suffix. > > Regards, > > Phi

Re: [Lubuntu-qa] Linux Kernel and the Future of Lubuntu

2013-06-13 Thread Phill Whiteside
The kernel on the release iso will never change (nor will ANYTHING else). Release ISO's are specifically frozen in time, for all time. This is why on LTS when a new iso is created it has a .1, .2, .3 and .4 suffix. Regards, Phill. On 13 June 2013 13:20, Ali Linx (amjjawad) wrote: > Hi, > > I a

[Lubuntu-qa] Linux Kernel and the Future of Lubuntu

2013-06-13 Thread Ali Linx (amjjawad)
Hi, I always prefer to think and plan ahead and I'm sure you all agree this is a good idea. "Better safe than sorry" :) Having that said, I'm sure you all know that we are in 2013 and Linux Kernel starting from series 3.xx and later, started to drop the support for some hardware. Day after day, t