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[–] DownloadedYourCar 0 points 2 points (+2|-0) ago  (edited ago)

If you set it to do level 1-5 updates, which I as a novice several years ago was able to figure out fairly easily, is just allowing the same updates as Ubuntu but with out the kernel updates, but the kernel headers still come through to inform you that a new kernel is available.

From there you just click on "Linux Kernels" in the Update Manager and it gives you an easy to understand list of kernels, indicating which ones are installed & which one is loaded. Then you just click on the new one you want and click install. Not as simple as Ubuntu which just does it all at once, but it's not a cryptic thing to do.

If these no savy users don't get a kernel update ever that leaves those users open to vulnerabilities in old kernels.

True, it's not ideal.