On 05/12/2017 11:24 AM, Michael Barnes wrote:
> I rebooted again and at the grub screen chose 14.04LTS. Everything came up
> normally. After login, I get a pop-up window that says 14.04 is out dated
> and no longer supported. Anyhow, display and everything works, so I know at
> least the hardware is okay. Shutdown and restart, let grub screen choose
> default and back to blank screens. I can ssh in and shutdown from remote
> session. Screens give Ubuntu shutdown splash just before power off.

Having been on this list a fairly long time, I've followed the advice of 
others who say one should not use the "upgrade" path to move from one 
Ubuntu release to another, but should start with a fresh install. I have 
gone from Ubuntu 10 to 12 to 14, and am slowly moving to 16. Each time I 
had the luxury of being able to at least put in a fresh hard drive for 
the new version, and then mount the old hard drive to be able to copy 
files as needed. I don't think any of the episodes has been painless, 
since it seems there's always something big that changes so that it 
doesn't work the way it did in the previous version, but I have always 
been able to get past it, often with the help of folks on this list.

So, in your case, I'd recommend using Grub to boot to your previous 
version, find a way to back up all your important files, and install 16 
from scratch. Better would be to have two machines, but not everyone has 
that luxury. I'm happy that I do have that option this time, because 
there are a handful of things I have yet to be able to figure out how to 
do in 16 that I need on at least a weekly basis, if not a daily one.

-- 
Regards,

Dick Steffens

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