Thanks for taking the time to respond to my frustrated report, Joao.

> If your old computer still survives another 3 years then you'd need to
switch to another linux distro when that time comes.

I know that now. I learned the hard way. My error report is about the
fact that I had to learn the hard way.

> Also regarding the full root partition (IDK why you'd want to separate
all those parts, /home /root /tmp /usr /var) but if you really want to
then it seems you need a harddrive with more space.

Again, I should not have to clean my /root partition out of junk left by
the installer and upgrade routines. They should clean up their own junk
or give me a <yes or no> option to do it when it gets full, instead of
leaving me to search forums and learn how to clean up their mess on the
command line when it overfills my /root partition.

The point is that a little light reading about partitions will advise
separation. Such reading is prompted after so many years of routine
ubuntu upgrades creating havoc - after those upgrades were done at the
click of a button and a prompt from the software updater: "New version
available - Upgrade Now!". This action was always hopeful , no matter
how many times it had caused problems in the past, because it was done
in the hope that a new installation would magically clear away the host
of errors that were characteristic of that most recent version. These
were not deal breakers, because I'm still here, loyally filling my
evenings with bug reports.

So after all this, and having spent more time than I would rather spare
looking in forums to deal with errors, you learn that having a separate
/home partition might be a good idea, because they say in the forums
that you can do an upgrade and restore some semblance of sanity with a
separate home partition if it all goes wrong. It does of course turn out
to be not quite so straightforward. But my need to protect my data and
not have days and weeks of time, both personal and professional, lost to
dealing with errors, has kept me conscious of this issue.

Thus when Xubuntu 12.04 offered a helpful way of having sepatate
partitions as part of an apparently foolproof graphical installation
routine, I obviously jumped at the chance. The promise was that I could
keep my applications and data intact, and have perhaps two different
installations running on the same machine (we are talking about the
desktop now, but desktop practices leak onto the laptop), so if anything
happened to one, I would not actually have any downtime, and I could
deal with the upgrade crisis at a time convenient to me. The forums and
official documentation all over the place bangs on about the merits of
having separate /home and /root and whatever other partitions. The
Xubuntu installar even does it all automatically.

Then when it goes wrong you get some smarty pants developer saying you
shouldn't have done it in the first place.

And then after all this, you learn your machine is not being supported
any more and you've got to go find a different distrubution. Oh the life
of a user. It's like being an S&M gimp.

> Also if you're too pressed for time and don't want to spend hours/days
solving problems, know that you can get commercial support for any of
the ubuntu distros.

I tried the commercial support. It was a waste of money.

Please listen, Joao. I'm not here writing bug reports for the fun of it,
nor because I like letting off steam. This my contribution. Don't give
me your platitudes. It's broken. Listen.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1168866

Title:
  upgrade could not install linux image

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