Upgrading Ubuntu 16.10 to Ubuntu 17.04 [closed]











up vote
-1
down vote

favorite












I'm upgrading Ubuntu 16.10 to Ubuntu 17.04 and it takes a long time to save the installed packages. In Ubuntu 16.10 I had nothing much extra installed.










share|improve this question















closed as off-topic by thomasrutter, pomsky, karel, guiverc, Terrance Nov 23 at 5:49


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is specific to an end of life Ubuntu release. These are no longer supported and are therefore off-topic here. To upgrade, see: How to install software or upgrade from old unsupported release?" – thomasrutter, pomsky, karel, guiverc, Terrance

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 2




    Both of those versions are out of date. Also, questions and answers here need to be in English.
    – thomasrutter
    Nov 23 at 0:59










  • Standard release of Ubuntu have support lives on 9 months. Ubuntu 16.10 was released in 2016.October (hence 16.10 using yy.mm format), and 17.04 in 2017.April, both of which are well past their 9 month support lives. If you need a longer support life, stick to LTS or long-term-support releases of Ubuntu which have 5 years of support (which are even-year.april release), ie. 14.04 LTS, 16.04 LTS or 18.04 LTS. Obviously as 14.04 is nearing EOL, I'd recommend 18.04 LTS
    – guiverc
    Nov 23 at 5:26















up vote
-1
down vote

favorite












I'm upgrading Ubuntu 16.10 to Ubuntu 17.04 and it takes a long time to save the installed packages. In Ubuntu 16.10 I had nothing much extra installed.










share|improve this question















closed as off-topic by thomasrutter, pomsky, karel, guiverc, Terrance Nov 23 at 5:49


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is specific to an end of life Ubuntu release. These are no longer supported and are therefore off-topic here. To upgrade, see: How to install software or upgrade from old unsupported release?" – thomasrutter, pomsky, karel, guiverc, Terrance

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









  • 2




    Both of those versions are out of date. Also, questions and answers here need to be in English.
    – thomasrutter
    Nov 23 at 0:59










  • Standard release of Ubuntu have support lives on 9 months. Ubuntu 16.10 was released in 2016.October (hence 16.10 using yy.mm format), and 17.04 in 2017.April, both of which are well past their 9 month support lives. If you need a longer support life, stick to LTS or long-term-support releases of Ubuntu which have 5 years of support (which are even-year.april release), ie. 14.04 LTS, 16.04 LTS or 18.04 LTS. Obviously as 14.04 is nearing EOL, I'd recommend 18.04 LTS
    – guiverc
    Nov 23 at 5:26













up vote
-1
down vote

favorite









up vote
-1
down vote

favorite











I'm upgrading Ubuntu 16.10 to Ubuntu 17.04 and it takes a long time to save the installed packages. In Ubuntu 16.10 I had nothing much extra installed.










share|improve this question















I'm upgrading Ubuntu 16.10 to Ubuntu 17.04 and it takes a long time to save the installed packages. In Ubuntu 16.10 I had nothing much extra installed.







upgrade 17.04 16.10






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 23 at 5:14









karel

55.3k11122140




55.3k11122140










asked Nov 23 at 0:54









Ronald Hilario Zelaya Gonzalez

1




1




closed as off-topic by thomasrutter, pomsky, karel, guiverc, Terrance Nov 23 at 5:49


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is specific to an end of life Ubuntu release. These are no longer supported and are therefore off-topic here. To upgrade, see: How to install software or upgrade from old unsupported release?" – thomasrutter, pomsky, karel, guiverc, Terrance

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.




closed as off-topic by thomasrutter, pomsky, karel, guiverc, Terrance Nov 23 at 5:49


This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:


  • "This question is specific to an end of life Ubuntu release. These are no longer supported and are therefore off-topic here. To upgrade, see: How to install software or upgrade from old unsupported release?" – thomasrutter, pomsky, karel, guiverc, Terrance

If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.








  • 2




    Both of those versions are out of date. Also, questions and answers here need to be in English.
    – thomasrutter
    Nov 23 at 0:59










  • Standard release of Ubuntu have support lives on 9 months. Ubuntu 16.10 was released in 2016.October (hence 16.10 using yy.mm format), and 17.04 in 2017.April, both of which are well past their 9 month support lives. If you need a longer support life, stick to LTS or long-term-support releases of Ubuntu which have 5 years of support (which are even-year.april release), ie. 14.04 LTS, 16.04 LTS or 18.04 LTS. Obviously as 14.04 is nearing EOL, I'd recommend 18.04 LTS
    – guiverc
    Nov 23 at 5:26














  • 2




    Both of those versions are out of date. Also, questions and answers here need to be in English.
    – thomasrutter
    Nov 23 at 0:59










  • Standard release of Ubuntu have support lives on 9 months. Ubuntu 16.10 was released in 2016.October (hence 16.10 using yy.mm format), and 17.04 in 2017.April, both of which are well past their 9 month support lives. If you need a longer support life, stick to LTS or long-term-support releases of Ubuntu which have 5 years of support (which are even-year.april release), ie. 14.04 LTS, 16.04 LTS or 18.04 LTS. Obviously as 14.04 is nearing EOL, I'd recommend 18.04 LTS
    – guiverc
    Nov 23 at 5:26








2




2




Both of those versions are out of date. Also, questions and answers here need to be in English.
– thomasrutter
Nov 23 at 0:59




Both of those versions are out of date. Also, questions and answers here need to be in English.
– thomasrutter
Nov 23 at 0:59












Standard release of Ubuntu have support lives on 9 months. Ubuntu 16.10 was released in 2016.October (hence 16.10 using yy.mm format), and 17.04 in 2017.April, both of which are well past their 9 month support lives. If you need a longer support life, stick to LTS or long-term-support releases of Ubuntu which have 5 years of support (which are even-year.april release), ie. 14.04 LTS, 16.04 LTS or 18.04 LTS. Obviously as 14.04 is nearing EOL, I'd recommend 18.04 LTS
– guiverc
Nov 23 at 5:26




Standard release of Ubuntu have support lives on 9 months. Ubuntu 16.10 was released in 2016.October (hence 16.10 using yy.mm format), and 17.04 in 2017.April, both of which are well past their 9 month support lives. If you need a longer support life, stick to LTS or long-term-support releases of Ubuntu which have 5 years of support (which are even-year.april release), ie. 14.04 LTS, 16.04 LTS or 18.04 LTS. Obviously as 14.04 is nearing EOL, I'd recommend 18.04 LTS
– guiverc
Nov 23 at 5:26















active

oldest

votes






















active

oldest

votes













active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes

Popular posts from this blog

Ellipse (mathématiques)

Quarter-circle Tiles

Mont Emei