OK, one problem here is that the applet icon does different jobs for
wired and wireless connections.  In my opinion, the netstatus icon
should show transmit-receive information, whichever network type is
being monitored:

- That is what people (certainly myself) expect from it (MS Windows does this 
for example).
- Signal strength information is provided by the network manager icon that is 
[always?] displayed in the notification area, and so should not be required 
from the netstatus applet.

I believe themes that do not provide gnome-netstatus signal strength
icons (0-24, 25-49, etc.) invoke this behaviour, since this is what
occurs on my home computer using wireless, and not using the humanity
theme (these icons default to those in the gnome directory).  Perhaps
the current behaviour should be a selectable option if anyone thinks
there is a demand for it.

Since wired and wireless networks are differentiated in the network
manager icon scheme, I suggest that the netstatus icon should symbolise
a generic network, neither wired nor wireless, and can therefore be more
consistent.  I've created a sample set of netstatus icons (including
those for signal strength) in this spirit, which I will attach along
with a preview image.  Of course it's the principle I would like to see
adopted, not necessarily these specific icons.

Do let me know what the official thoughts are on this.  Cheers.

P.S. The signal strength icons will particularly indistinct on a
standard panel due to a current bug which scales the icon by two pixels
unnecessarily, resulting in rather blurry icons.  Set panel size to 26
for the clear version.

-- 
network-idle icon links to (is the same as) network-transmit-receive.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/611336
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