Lisi writes: > You've slightly lost me - when is a new kernel a new kernel and when > is it an update?
I think it's a "new kernel" when the Debian maintainers package a new upstream release. It's an "update" when they repackage an existing kernel to include some sort of change (to the kernel or its packaging) that they made. It's all the same to the package management system, though. To it if they have different version numbers they are different kernels and you can have as many installed as you want. -- John Hasler jhas...@newsguy.com Elmwood, WI USA