According to you output zram does not appear to be loaded, if it was we would see a zram device, ie: /dev/zram0, /dev/zram1 (if your machine has two processors, dual core, core duo, or hyperthreading).
You can remove the 3 following files:
/var/crash/zram-config.0.crash
/var/crash/zram-config.0.upload
/var/crash/zram-config.0.uploaded
and you can uninstall all the previous kernels and headers which have been installed in your system before the 3.2.0-58. If you fear something works less well, you could keep the two last sets, linux-image and linux-headers, ie 3.2.0-58 and 3.2.0-56. You can use Synaptic to do that (filter with "search > name > linux" then, "search > name > headers", then click on the top of the first row to gather the said names which a related to installed packages).
You will gain more or less 120 MB for each old kernel + headers removed.
Hi Damian,
According to you output zram does not appear to be loaded, if it was we would see a zram device, ie: /dev/zram0, /dev/zram1 (if your machine has two processors, dual core, core duo, or hyperthreading).
You can remove the 3 following files: zram-config. 0.crash zram-config. 0.upload zram-config. 0.uploaded
/var/crash/
/var/crash/
/var/crash/
and you can uninstall all the previous kernels and headers which have been installed in your system before the 3.2.0-58. If you fear something works less well, you could keep the two last sets, linux-image and linux-headers, ie 3.2.0-58 and 3.2.0-56. You can use Synaptic to do that (filter with "search > name > linux" then, "search > name > headers", then click on the top of the first row to gather the said names which a related to installed packages).
You will gain more or less 120 MB for each old kernel + headers removed.