** Description changed:

  Windows 8  has raised the bar when it comes to the default application
  an operating system provides for monitoring your system.
  
  In the attached screen shot, you'll see that not only do I get a large
  graph for the thumbnail I've selected (on the left), but each thumbnail
  provides (in itself) a real-time graph of the stats I'd normally have to
  do additional steps to see in other operating systems.
  
  This is awesome, because in one window you can see what is bottle-
  necking your system (Processor, Disk Read/Write, Network Speed, Ram,
  etc) at any given point in time (real time).
  
  Often, the hard drive is what is bottle-necking tasks you are trying to
  accomplish, however Gnome-System-Monitor doesn't provide monitoring for
  this aspect of system monitoring.
  
- I'm a big time Linux fan here, but when I see something that's awesome
- somewhere else, I fell compelled to report it
+ I'm a Linux enthusiast, but when I see something that's awesome
+ (somewhere else) I feel compelled to report it.
  
  I'd like to see our default system monitor be as complete: providing
  disk-transfer-utilization stats, and allowing us to see all graphs a
  once.
  
  Be sure to see the attachment below!

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You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1102707

Title:
  New Standard - Need to add Multi-Graph View with Disk Monitoring

Status in “gnome-system-monitor” package in Ubuntu:
  New

Bug description:
  Windows 8  has raised the bar when it comes to the default application
  an operating system provides for monitoring your system.

  In the attached screen shot, you'll see that not only do I get a large
  graph for the thumbnail I've selected (on the left), but each
  thumbnail provides (in itself) a real-time graph of the stats I'd
  normally have to do additional steps to see in other operating
  systems.

  This is awesome, because in one window you can see what is bottle-
  necking your system (Processor, Disk Read/Write, Network Speed, Ram,
  etc) at any given point in time (real time).

  Often, the hard drive is what is bottle-necking tasks you are trying
  to accomplish, however Gnome-System-Monitor doesn't provide monitoring
  for this aspect of system monitoring.

  I'm a Linux enthusiast, but when I see something that's awesome
  (somewhere else) I feel compelled to report it.

  I'd like to see our default system monitor be as complete: providing
  disk-transfer-utilization stats, and allowing us to see all graphs a
  once.

  Be sure to see the attachment below!

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnome-system-monitor/+bug/1102707/+subscriptions

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