Still have this issue on a fresh install of Raring. And as others say, this is especially problematic for those of us with an encrypted setup, as the /boot partition fills up very quickly, causing software upgrades to fail. This problem can only be solved by manually removing old kernels, and I suspect the average user will not think to do this.
Still have this issue on a fresh install of Raring. And as others say, this is especially problematic for those of us with an encrypted setup, as the /boot partition fills up very quickly, causing software upgrades to fail. This problem can only be solved by manually removing old kernels, and I suspect the average user will not think to do this.