Net Deals Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. I would specifically like to know the most recent version of Ubuntu that still used Linux Kernel 2.x ...

  3. Point releases are specific for LTS (Long Term Supported) versions of Ubuntu. Because these versions get 3 years of support (5 years for servers), the changes between the initial release image (10.04 for instance) and the current packages grow huge.

  4. I have some software packages customised for Ubuntu 10.04, 10.10 and 12.10, but now I have to install them on Debian Squeeze. I have been unable to Google for a mapping between specific Ubuntu and Debian versions. Can someone here help? Specifically I want to know which Ubuntu version corresponds to Debian Squeeze.

  5. The repositories for older releases that are not supported (like 11.04, 11.10 and 13.04) get moved to an archive server.

  6. How do I upgrade to a newer version of Ubuntu?

    askubuntu.com/questions/110477

    From the technical overview: To upgrade from Ubuntu 11.04 on a desktop system, press Alt+F2 and type in update-manager (without the quotes) into the command box. Update Manager should open up and tell you: New distribution release '11.10' is available. Click Upgrade and follow the on-screen instructions.

  7. The base of the operating system, Debian, comes in three versions: Stable, Testing and Unstable. Normally, Ubuntu is based on Unstable; the LTS releases are based on Testing. Starting with 14.04 LTS, all new releases will be based on Debian Unstable. The Development effort for an LTS release in focused on providing a rock solid base, not only ...

  8. How to release an IP address and renew from the commandline?

    askubuntu.com/questions/767308/how-to-release-an-ip-address-and-renew-from-the...

    I am using modern versions of Ubuntu that use network-manager, and I would like release and renew my network settings through the commandline. In the olden days when Ubuntu used the interfaces fil...

  9. CLI: Get information Ubuntu releases

    askubuntu.com/questions/1126687/cli-get-information-ubuntu-releases

    ubuntu-distro-info --lts --fullname For currently supported releases. ubuntu-distro-info --supported --fullname (This strangely includes the current development version although it is not supported yet) To get the number of days till EndOfLive you add --days=eol (shorter -yeol) ubuntu-distro-info --supported --fullname --days=eol

  10. Normally, Ubuntu is based on Testing; the LTS releases are based on Stable. That cannot be true then for 12.04 because Debian Stable (Squeeze) is almost going to be old-stable, and it's obvious that the kernel versions in 12.04, packages, etc. cannot have come from Debian Squeeze. So then what other Debian Stable is there for Precise to be ...

  11. The main component will contain wallpapers for current Ubuntu release and universe component will contain wallpapers for previous Ubuntu releases and other flavours. Open a terminal and run the following command. apt-cache search ubuntu wallpapers | sort -n. This will return a local search result: use "ubuntu wallpapers" as keywords and find ...