On Wed, 2010-02-24 at 10:06 +1030, Karl Goetz wrote: > On Tue, 23 Feb 2010 17:02:14 -0500 > Ted Smith <[email protected]> wrote: > > > On Tue, 2010-02-23 at 22:08 +0100, Graziano wrote: > > > > I assume this means that network-manager lets you set up a VPN > > > > connection, but that wicd doesn't have that feature. > > > > > > > > > > I understood it this way too. > > > I am not aware about how many people find that feature useful > > > anyway. I don't. > > > > > > > VPN support is a vital feature, especially for a netbook. > > You are the first person I've seen who uses it (maybe second, my former > boss might have used it). > RMS uses it. Presumably other FSF staff do as well. A bunch of people in my workplace use it, since it lets us get to department-internal servers. Nearly every enterprise workplace has a VPN.
> > Why is this discussion happening, exactly? What's the compelling > > reason to move away from network-manager and adopt wicd? It seems to > > me like that will just create a bigger delta at no benefit. > > The number of backported packages required for network-manager is > getting silly. But as long as it's the default in Debian (which it is, to the best of my recollection), doesn't adopting something else mean a bigger delta in the long term? Presumably the backported packages will become stable at some point, shrinking the delta, but wicd will never be adopted as the default in Debian.
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