[10:52] * enyc was about to ask question then answered itself ... "rolling HWE kernel model" =) [10:53] http://news.softpedia.com/news/ubuntu-16-04-2-lts-lands-january-19-2017-with-ubuntu-16-10-s-linux-4-8-kernel-510572.shtml [10:53] Though I note 4.9 is the kernel.org LTS version, not 4.8 .... [10:54] doesnt matter. ubuntu got a own kernel team doing the support for the time [10:54] look hat here to understand what this HWE is about: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Kernel/LTSEnablementStack#Kernel.2FSupport.A16.04.x_Ubuntu_Kernel_Support [10:55] the change is now, that you cant stay on that 16.10 backports kernel anymore. you are upgraded to the 17.04 bakcports kernel on 16.04.3 automatically. [10:56] k1l_: that page and linuxd page don't appear to say what GA actually stands for, just what it effectively is [10:57] GA? [10:59] k1l_: "The Release Team has also agreed that for 16.04 server images, they will offer both the GA and HWE Kernels." [11:00] "The Ubuntu 16.04 LTS release ships with a standard Ubuntu v4.4 kernel. It is commonly referred to as the GA kernel and is supported " [11:00] GA looks suspiciously like an acronym ;p [11:00] the original 16.04 kernel [11:02] if you look at the link i showed you you will see the difference from 16.04 compared to the LTS releases before [11:02] yes it does [11:02] but it doesn't say what G and A actualyl stood for anywhere [11:31] enyc: GA = General Availability [11:32] From http://askubuntu.com/questions/248914/what-is-hardware-enablement-hwe "Ubuntu will offer at least two kernels: the General Availability (GA) kernel, i.e. the most stable kernel, which does not get updated to point releases; and the Hardware Enablement (HWE) kernel" === cyphase_eviltwin is now known as cyphase