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Archive: https://archive.today/XuyZJ

From the post:

>Worth noting above is that Linux 5.10 and 5.15 are both hitting EOL this year in December, so if your distro is still running either of these, now is a good time to start thinking about a move. If you are not that deep into the kernel rabbit hole, then you need to know that most releases only get about two months of active support before the next one takes over. LTS releases are the exception here.

Archive: https://archive.today/XuyZJ From the post: >>Worth noting above is that Linux 5.10 and 5.15 are both hitting EOL this year in December, so if your distro is still running either of these, now is a good time to start thinking about a move. If you are not that deep into the kernel rabbit hole, then you need to know that most releases only get about two months of active support before the next one takes over. LTS releases are the exception here.
[–] 1 pt

I'm not worried about it. It's got a lot of logging on it, and it's had maybe 5 odd attempts over the last 10 years.

[–] 1 pt

Speaking from a guy that has intentionally broken shit like that. It only takes one time, once.

Just putting that out there.

[–] 1 pt

I'm well aware of the risks. Unfortunately the stuff it runs was deprecated in the mainline repositories many years ago.