[03:53] <guiverc> https://discourse.lubuntu.me/t/slow-boot-times-of-lubuntu-22-04-lts-on-some-hardware/3280 still applies with 22.0.1 RC (0729.1)
[14:00] <tsimonq2> Good morning 
[14:01] <tsimonq2> It's been a pretty long extended weekend but I'm back. Eickmeyer @eickmeyer:matrix.org: thanks for temporarily filling in some of my sponsorship shoes
[14:01] <tsimonq2> arraybolt3 @arraybolt3:matrix.org: ping catch me up to speed please :)
[14:01] <Eickmeyer[m]> tsimonq2: You're welcome, glad I could help. Believe it or not, no uploads were needed.
[14:02] <Eickmeyer[m]> er... requested.
[14:04] <guiverc> tsimonq2, you likely know, but release notes for 22.04.1 are on notes.lubuntu.me ; https://notes.lubuntu.me/kN5uW5gMRBKXb0eyzF0RsA#
[14:48] <tsimonq2> Will look in a bit guiverc thank you
[14:48] <tsimonq2> Dan Simmons: Do you want the RL hat for this point release or do you want me to drive it? Not particular, let me know your thoughts. 
[14:49] <tsimonq2> s/RL/RM/
[14:50] <kc2bez[m]> tsimonq2: I can do it, I wouldn't mind if you proofread the notes though.
 "I can do it, I wouldn't mind..." <- Sounds good
[17:25] -queuebot:#lubuntu-devel- Builds: Lubuntu Desktop amd64 [Jammy 22.04.1] has been updated (20220801)
[19:05] <arraybolt3[m]> Simon Quigley (Developer): Alright, catch-up time:... (full message at https://libera.ems.host/_matrix/media/r0/download/libera.chat/20b20fb212c1204fbeb41cc15e33590aa7fef2c6)
[19:06] <arraybolt3[m]> * Release notes for 22.04.1 were written
[19:06] <arraybolt3[m]> * And as usual, lots of support stuff on Discourse, IRC, and mailing lists.
[19:06] <arraybolt3[m]> That's about it - I guess we're ready to tackle LXQt in Debian again?
[19:07] <arraybolt3[m]> Oh, actually one more thing - I have a project in mind that might help users of bleeding-edge hardware be able to use Lubuntu and other Ubuntu flavors more easily - what if we were to make preinstalled images of all Ubuntu flavors in VMs, install the latest Linux kernel into them (like the newly-released 5.19 kernel), then package those and distribute them?
[19:08] <arraybolt3[m]> (I just did this last night for a guy in #kubuntu - we're about to see if it lets him run Kubuntu on his Galaxy Book S. He couldn't even get the installer to work, but Fedora worked, so the kernel update may fix it, and having the preinstalled image will make it so that he doesn't have to install it at all.)
[19:09] <tsimonq2> arraybolt3[m]: Two words: layered squashfs
[19:09] <tsimonq2> arraybolt3[m]: "Keep 'er movin"
[19:09] <arraybolt3[m]> How will that help if the kernel being booted by the ISO is too old?
[19:09] <arraybolt3[m]> I thought the kernel was baked into the ISO itself.
[19:10] <tsimonq2> You make layered squashfses
[19:10] <tsimonq2> arraybolt3[m]: And you make the ISO
[19:10] <arraybolt3[m]> Oh.
[19:10] <arraybolt3[m]> For some reason I thought that was an insanely difficult task.
[19:10] <tsimonq2> Ubuntu already provides builds of e.g. 5.19 with the Ubuntu config, the project is called mainline-crack (not joking)
[19:11] <arraybolt3[m]> What? OK, I need a link to that, because that would have saved the poor guy in #kubuntu hours of work.
[19:13] <arraybolt3[m]> Oh, I guess that's just the kernel, not the whole ISO. Hmm. OK. I guess next time I'll look into ISO building instead.
[19:15] <tsimonq2> Yes, have you seen our recent commits?
[19:19] <arraybolt3[m]> I have not, I've been in too much of a frenzy with Calamares (including turning up a random Secure Boot bug in Studio, that one was fun^U^U^U brainbending to deal with).
[20:18] <Eickmeyer[m]> Said secure boot bug should be resolved now, the offending dkms package has been dealt with via a large hammer.