I have waited since Kubuntu 12.04.2 was released for it to show up form PPA. It has not and, I have the needed Backports and Precise PPA's in software sources. What gives? Does anyone might know why I am not getting this update? Please help.
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There is no ppa for this, it is a normal update. If you keep your system up to date you already have it.
The release means that the install image is up to date , so fresh installs are more current and have all the updates.
If you have ppa's going, your KDE may actually be more up to date than 12.04.2
Sent from my SCH-I510 using Tapatalk 2Last edited by claydoh; Feb 18, 2013, 07:32 PM.
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The version shows up in System Information as version 12.04.2 yet, I do not have any of the updates discribed by the release documentation. I have the same 3.2 kernel not the 3.5 version. I tried what vinny said above and, I have the message that says, I have the latest version. What gives?
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No you will not see a major new kernel version in 12.04, 12.10 has the 3.5 kernel, you don't see that in an LTS. Unless you added a ppa to get a newer KDE, I don't think you will see a big update to the desktop. Add I said, if you keep your system up to date, you already have the .2, the release is merely to provide an install image that it's up to date with as LTS is going to be around awhile it keeps new installs from having to be updated as much
Sent from my SCH-I510 using Tapatalk 2
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Google is your friend...
According to Canonical, 12.04.2 images ship with 3.5, but you will not get 3.5 using apt-get dist-upgrade unless you enable the "LTS Hardware Enablement Stack." Behold:
In an effort to support a wider variety of hardware on an existing LTS release, the 12.04.2 point release will ship with an updated kernel and X stack by default. This newer hardware enablement stack will be comprised of the kernel and X stack from the Quantal 12.10 release. The hardware enablement stack is only intended for use on x86 hardware at this time. Those running virtual or cloud images should not need this newer hardware enablement stack and thus it is recommended they remain on the original Precise stack. To remain on the original Precise stack, there are a few options:
- Install from a previous 12.04.0 or 12.04.1 point release and update. The previous 12.04.0 and 12.04.1 releases are archived at http://old-releases.ubuntu.com/
- Perform an update or upgrade to Precise from a previous Ubuntu release. Only those installing from the 12.04.2 media will automatically receive a newer hardware enablement stack by default.
- Perform a network install using the netboot images rather than the new quantal-netboot images.
Anyone wishing to opt into the hardware enablement stack for Precise may do so by running following command which will install the linux-generic-lts-quantal and xserver-xorg-lts-quantal packages:
sudo apt-get install linux-generic-lts-quantal xserver-xorg-lts-quantal
For anyone interested, the specifics regarding the exact policies and procedures regarding the support, maintenance, and upgrade paths for the hardware enablement stack has been documented at the following location:
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/LTSEnablementStackLast edited by oshunluvr; Feb 19, 2013, 11:08 AM.
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Thank you oshunluvr for the info. I am sticking with the LTS as-is. I stuck with it because of the stability. I just wonder why Ubuntu would not give the proper documentation explaining what you just explained from Google. I was lead to believe that this newer version of the LTS would be stable. What is up with that?
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Originally posted by oshunluvr View PostGoogle is your friend...
According to Canonical, 12.04.2 images ship with 3.5, but you will not get 3.5 using apt-get dist-upgrade unless you enable the "LTS Hardware Enablement Stack.".
Sent from my SCH-I510 using Tapatalk 2Last edited by claydoh; Feb 19, 2013, 02:33 PM.
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That quote came from the Ubuntu official wiki pages so it was actually announced by Canonical but I haven't seen it referenced anywhere else.
I agree it's odd that they would "switch horses" mid-stream with an LTS release like that, but I supposed it's related to work-load for the development team. Personally, IMO unless you can find a compelling reason to use the newer kernel and xorg, you might just stay with what you've got just for simplicity sakes.
Another idea: If you're considering the upgrade to the LTS Hardware Enablement Stack, you might download the new ISO and make a bootable USB or CD to test the compatibility with your hardware before you do the upgrade install.
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Originally posted by oshunluvr View PostThat quote came from the Ubuntu official wiki pages so it was actually announced by Canonical but I haven't seen it referenced anywhere else.
I agree it's odd that they would "switch horses" mid-stream with an LTS release like that, but I supposed it's related to work-load for the development team. Personally, IMO unless you can find a compelling reason to use the newer kernel and xorg, you might just stay with what you've got just for simplicity sakes.
Another idea: If you're considering the upgrade to the LTS Hardware Enablement Stack, you might download the new ISO and make a bootable USB or CD to test the compatibility with your hardware before you do the upgrade install.
Michel
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While LTS in Ubuntu is supposed to have more polish and stability, this status is mostly for security updates in the long run and not for software version updates, or at least this has been the case in the past. If you are going to the new kernel and newer KDE, I am not sure keeping to 12.04 is totally worthwhile, outside of security updates from the official channels.
This all is dependent on each individual's system and needs, so testing is required as no one can easily verify any increase in stability for any particular hardware setup. New kernels can have regressions in drivers sometimes. However what I do not see mentioned anywhere is if Xorg and related video drivers will be updated, which is a bit separate from the kernel.
Test driving live disk sessions or actually installing may be the only way to tell, but posting new threads on some of your problems might shed more light especially if you give some system info when you do
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Originally posted by claydoh View PostWhile LTS in Ubuntu is supposed to have more polish and stability, this status is mostly for security updates in the long run and not for software version updates, or at least this has been the case in the past. If you are going to the new kernel and newer KDE, I am not sure keeping to 12.04 is totally worthwhile, outside of security updates from the official channels.
This all is dependent on each individual's system and needs, so testing is required as no one can easily verify any increase in stability for any particular hardware setup. New kernels can have regressions in drivers sometimes. However what I do not see mentioned anywhere is if Xorg and related video drivers will be updated, which is a bit separate from the kernel.
Test driving live disk sessions or actually installing may be the only way to tell, but posting new threads on some of your problems might shed more light especially if you give some system info when you do
Michel
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