From: ronb02NOSPAM@gmail.com   
      
   On 2026-02-13, pothead wrote:   
   > On 2026-02-13, vallor wrote:   
   >> At 11 Feb 2026 20:30:44 GMT, rbowman wrote:   
   >>   
   >>> On Wed, 11 Feb 2026 10:39:19 -0000 (UTC), RonB wrote:   
   >>>   
   >>>   
   >>> > In Linux Mint, you can do this is in Update Manager. When you see   
   >>> > the kernel that is going to be updated, you right-click on the   
   >>> > square beside it and choose either "Ignore the current update for   
   >>> > this package." Or "Ignore all future updates for this package."   
   >>>   
   >>> I seldom use the GUI in any distro. In this case 'sudo apt upgrade'   
   >>> failed trying to install the 6.17 kernel. I id open Update Manager   
   >>> but the kernel packages had been downloaded and didn't show.   
   >>   
   >> Update Manager > View > Linux Kernels   
   >>   
   >> Unfortunately, that won't let you set the default kernel for boot.   
   >> Note that some kernels are offered, but are "unsupported", such as   
   >> 6.18.9, which was just added. You'll have to poke at grub to get it   
   >> to pick a kernel.   
   >>   
   >> I asked Chatty about a gui tool to set the default kernel -- apparently   
   >> there is one called "grub-customizer", but it isn't in the Mint repos.   
   >   
   > So under LinuxMint Cinammon how do I safely delete older kernels I don't use   
   > but are taking up space?   
   > I remember trying this a year or two ago under MXLinux and the results were   
   a spectacular failure   
   > so obviously I missed something :)   
   > TIA   
      
   sudo apt autoremove   
      
   Is how I do it. I think that retains a couple older kernels. You can also   
   delete unused kernels in Update Manager, one by one.   
      
   --   
   "Not just insane... Trump insane."   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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