Christopher, I decided to skip Raring and try again when Saucy is
released, because Raring did not work at all for me. Therefore, I do not
need a backport. But I can not speak for others.
Apparently there are quite a few who can use Raring. But they need to
annoyingly boot it several times before success. They would certainly
benefit from a backport.
Are there resources for doing a backport anyway? Out of interest, would
the whole saucy kernel be backported?
Am 21.07.2013 19:00, schrieb Christopher M. Penalver:
> Alexander Röhnsch, did you need a backport to a release prior to Saucy
> or may we close this as Status Invalid?
>
> ** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
> Status: Confirmed => Incomplete
>
Christopher, I decided to skip Raring and try again when Saucy is
released, because Raring did not work at all for me. Therefore, I do not
need a backport. But I can not speak for others.
Apparently there are quite a few who can use Raring. But they need to
annoyingly boot it several times before success. They would certainly
benefit from a backport.
Are there resources for doing a backport anyway? Out of interest, would
the whole saucy kernel be backported?
Am 21.07.2013 19:00, schrieb Christopher M. Penalver:
> Alexander Röhnsch, did you need a backport to a release prior to Saucy
> or may we close this as Status Invalid?
>
> ** Changed in: linux (Ubuntu)
> Status: Confirmed => Incomplete
>