Score:0

Cannot edit update-manager-core even after having sudo permissions. Need it essentially in order to upgrade from Ubuntu 22.04.1 to 22.10!

is flag

/etc/update-manager/release-upgrades I have to upgrade Ubuntu 22.04.1 to 22.10. I'm following steps to do that from this website. Step-4 of the procedure to be followed asks to edit update-manager-core by adding Prompt=normal. This step can't be followed as Terminal is denying me access to do so (Screenshot attached). Please help me to bypass this situation and upgrade to 22.10...Permission Denied!

user535733 avatar
cn flag
You are following instructions that seem poorly written in spots. The actual instruction is to "*Open and edit the /etc/update-manager/release-upgrades file*," but it does not tell you how to do so.
Gamer Undefeated avatar
is flag
Oh thank you for mentioning the error to me... @user535733
Score:3
um flag

Try:

sudo nano /etc/update-manager/release-upgrades

Explanation: you have to use some text editor in root mode.

Score:2
cn flag

If you are using a desktop OS, you don't have to edit anything manually.

You can go to Software & Updates application and choose to upgrade to a non-LTS Ubuntu version.

But for a very new user it is not recommended.

Gamer Undefeated avatar
is flag
I've dual booted Ubuntu 22.04.1 with Windows 11. Well, I wanted to download ISO of Ubuntu 22.10, but by mistakenly I downloaded it of 22.04.1 and created a USB boot Drive of it. Now I just wanted to ask why it isn't recommended for new users?
Pilot6 avatar
cn flag
Non-LTS versions have only 9 months support and usually are less stable. You'll have to upgrade every 6 months to new releases that may contain some new features not really tested very well. The upgrade process is not always straight forward. For a new user who doesn't have enough skills it is a real challenge.
Pilot6 avatar
cn flag
If you want a system that will work for a long time without surprises, LTS is the right choice.
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