you can update whatever you want on-the-fly at a embedded system, but to
enable these updates you *must* reboot the system. Sometimes (usually)
embedded systems work years without reboot. Who cares about "old kernel"?
:) It must be stable first of all and only after that super-new-features
matter


2014/1/9 Robert Nelson <[email protected]>

> On Thu, Jan 9, 2014 at 10:36 AM, Martin AA6E <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> > This article by Bruce Schneier is sobering, and it applies to most of us
> > building embedded systems.  Some of us may get security updates via
> > repositories (e.g. Ubuntu), but generally you won't get new kernels this
> > way.  How many Beagle-ish systems are out there attached to the Internet,
> > but with ageing kernels and unpatched for a long time? How can we manage
> > this better in the future?
>
> Well if your running my images, ping the server to get the updated
> kernel's..
>
> beaglebone:
> http://rcn-ee.net/deb/saucy-armhf/LATEST-omap-psp
>
> device tree beagle xm:
> http://rcn-ee.net/deb/saucy-armhf/LATEST-armv7
>
> Regards,
>
> --
> Robert Nelson
> http://www.rcn-ee.com/
>
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