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Linux Kernel 3.14 Series Has Reached End of Life (softpedia.com)

Slashdot reader prisoninmate quotes an article on Softpedia: it looks like the Linux kernel maintainers decided that there's no need to maintain the Linux kernel 3.14 LTS series anymore, so earlier today, September 11, 2016, they decided to release that last maintenance update, version 3.14.79, and mark the series as EOL (End of Life). Famous Linux kernel maintainer Greg Kroah-Hartman was the one to make the big announcement, and he's urging users who want to still run a long-term supported kernel version to move to the Linux 4.4 LTS series, which is currently the most advanced LTS branch, or use the latest stable release, Linux kernel 4.7.3...

Linux kernel 3.14.79 is a very small update that changes a total of 12 files, with 45 insertions and 17 deletions, thus fixing a bug in the EXT4 file system, a networking issue related to the Reliable Datagram Sockets (RDS) protocol, and updating a few HID, s390, SCSI, networking drivers.

1 of 99 comments (clear)

  1. More reasons to use Windows instead of Linux by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    At least with Windows, you know how long your OS is going to be maintained for. They don't just randomly decide that they're done issuing updates and discontinue it. Besides, each version of Windows is maintained longer than Linux, which is another plus. And unlike Linux, Windows still supports old hardware like 32 bit systems. There's no reason to replace a system that's working just fine, but that's what your forced to do when developers just randomly decide that it's time to stop maintaining a version of Linux.