
This is my original Ubuntu 23.10 installation that I allowed Ubuntu itself to update to 24.04. I already had written about installing 24.04 fresh onto SanDisk Extreme PLUS V30 128 GiB micro SDXC card, and that’s what I’d been using since 24.04’s release in late April. Then Ubuntu announced that they were allowing 23.10 users to update, in place, to 24.04. I swapped the older micro SDXC card back into my Raspberry Pi 5 and kicked off the update process. All told it took about two hours.
When I got back into my Raspberry Pi again I had to make three minor tweaks (so far) to get it back to my original settings. The minor tweaks weren’t out of anything nefarious Ubuntu did, it was update changes that were to be expected, especially when you consider all the changes that took place between 23.10’s release and 24.04. Never believe anyone on the internets who babble that changes are minor between Ubuntu’s last interim release and the following LTS release.
The minor changes that had to be corrected where due to Python being upgraded from 3.11 to 3.12. That meant I had delete the EXTERNALLY-MANAGED file from /usr/lib/python3.12, then reinstall powerline-status to get my shell and vim prompts back, luma.led_matrix (and all its dependencies) to get my matrix clock back on the external GPIO pins, and gpiozero to support additional GPIO functionality. Then I had to change my icons back to Papirus-Dark via gnome-tweaks because Ubuntu’s update changed them to Yaru. As I said, not much to twiddle with.
What I found extremely interesting is that I got my desktop clock back (lower left corner) and that the extension manager which provides the desktop clock is working correctly.
While I’ll keep my clean-installed 24.04 as a backup, I’m glad I was able to move back to my 23.10 installation and update it to the latest Ubuntu release. When 24.10 arrives in October I may just move on up to it.
I got a replacement for the defective USB stick and made a working bootable Mint 20 drive at last. Tried it out on the ol’ Probook and of course it works better than Win7. However I am loather to try a permanent install because I need Windows for one application that Linux can’t do and am leery of dual-boot systems. The HD is small on this machine too. Ordinarily I would just get a second drive but … I seem to have some trouble handling very small screws these days. Oh well I muddle on.
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