As I see it, starting from my kubuntu 15.10 current installation, I have two basic choices.
1: grab the live install iso image, burn it to a DVD (or to a usb) and do a wipe and clean install from that. As an aside, I'm not sure why there isn't an 'upgrade' option in this method. If I've managed to miss it, it would not hurt my feeling to have it pointed out.
2: Online upgrade via the Update Manager (normally). Given that the Muon Update Manager has been having it's own issues, I've seen the command-line work around.
This is my question: the upgrade via Update Manager attempts to keep your current software and data as intact as it can, thereby reducing the workload of the upgrade. If you, for whatever reason, have to do the upgrade by the command-line, does it still attempt to preserve your data and such, or is it a wipe/clean install like the DVD method?
1: grab the live install iso image, burn it to a DVD (or to a usb) and do a wipe and clean install from that. As an aside, I'm not sure why there isn't an 'upgrade' option in this method. If I've managed to miss it, it would not hurt my feeling to have it pointed out.
2: Online upgrade via the Update Manager (normally). Given that the Muon Update Manager has been having it's own issues, I've seen the command-line work around.
This is my question: the upgrade via Update Manager attempts to keep your current software and data as intact as it can, thereby reducing the workload of the upgrade. If you, for whatever reason, have to do the upgrade by the command-line, does it still attempt to preserve your data and such, or is it a wipe/clean install like the DVD method?
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