This Readme is based on the forum announcements by jdmcaniel3:

I am Happy To announce S.A.K.C. Version 2.00 with a brand new user 
interface. Here is what you are in store for:

S.A.K.C. Version 2.00 includes all of the features of the previous 
version plus all text output from your Kernel Configuration, Compiling 
and Installation are saved to a text file for viewing right after the 
new Kernel is installed and later as well. You no longer need to press 
enter to take the many defaults for your new kernel configuration. 
As your new Kernel compiles, the minutes tick off for you to see. Please 
download and enjoy S.A.K.C. Version 2.00. I welcome your comments....

Following is version 2.10 of S.A.K.C. which fixes the folder issue that 
can occur if you extract an archive located in another folder that is 
not in the default folder. I have changed the sound player so that it 
does not run if the play program is not found. I setup S.A.K.C. so that 
any of the four functions fail, the program just exits. There are other 
changes as well. Hopefully this will work better for you.


To use sakc, download the latest kernel source files from ...

The Linux Kernel Archives

Into your downloads folder. Open up a terminal session, change to your 
downloads folder and run the command:

"Code: sakc kernel_name"

If you have any comments, problems or requests, please let me know.

Here are some others things to note:

1. Keep all Kernel Source Compile folders as long as you use that kernel 
version. Having the source to the loaded kernel is imported for many 
operations like loading a proprietary video driver.

2. Kernel Source Compile folders can take up a lot of room. Between 6 
and 7 GB each! If you have upgraded to a newer kernel (like going from 
kernel-2.6.37-rc4 to kernel-2.6.37-rc5, then DELETE the older kernel 
compile folder called kernel-2.6.37-rc4 and remove the kernel loads 
lines from your grub menu.lst file and save some room. Any kernel you 
want an option to use, keep the compile folder and its load option in 
your menu.lst file.

!!!Since 2.50 KLIST is not a extra script anymore but is a function in the sakc script.!!!
If you start sakc with no command line options the Original klist menu will be displayed 
(if you do not enter a kernel source file name when you start sakc)

For KLIST to work, You have already downloaded and made active the 
S.A.K.C. script file.
To use klist, download the latest kernel source files from ...

The Linux Kernel Archives

and save the source file into your downloads folder. Open up a terminal session and run the command:

"Code: klist"

Again, you must already have the S.A.K.C. script file on your computer 
before you can use klist. If you have any comments, problems or requests, 
please let me know.
