Then the Ubuntu kernel team is just retardedly stupid. And I will make
it harsh.

There is no SINGLE technical reason to not support it. The kernel runs
PAE kernels just fine. There is a bug maybe you can call it, that does
not tell you that it IS pae (36 bit addressing) capable. It just lags
the PAE flag. THe sheer amount of users coming here and to the forum
thread alone should give you an idea that it is still relevant.

That said, they deliberatly broke the Pentium-M by checking for the PAE
flag. Granted this should be a valid check, and the Pentium-M messes
that check up. There's your bug.

Also, this bug is about SYSLINUX. NOT the kernel (it is now too though).
SYSLINUX here checks on boot if you have the PAE flag and refuses to
boot. It REFUSES, not because its technically not possible, no, because
it was decided so, because of a silicon bug if you will.

Recently the kernel team decided to have a PAE check int he package.
'Only install if you have the PAE flag'. Now in the kernel package, this
may make a little more sense, there's PAE and non-PAE kernels available,
and adding a non-PAE ppa is easy. Syslinux can't be easily replaced,
well you can grub chainload your ISO and all is well.

So if this truely is about support, then stop supporting the 32 bit
architecture. Period. But with that even being the recommended
architecture for must, I don't see this happening soon. This again, has
nothing to do with the Pentium-M not being supported, but about the CPU
not properly announcing PAE.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/930447

Title:
  Unable to start Ubuntu 12.04 live CD with syslinux loader on Pentium M
  x86 Laptop due to bug in PAE kernel, initramfs or syslinux

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