On Wednesday, October 20, 2010 05:58:14 am you wrote:
> Wouldn't it have been better to give us the choice, simply by doing
> nothing and just publishing in the 10.10 release notes that there was
> a driver issue and Intel werre working on it?  What is the argument
> for actively disabling 802.11n?  I could have quite happily
> re-configured my router and laptop so that I only connected to
> wireless G if I was that bothered about the N degrading.

No, because the degradation wasn't limited to N connections.  All users of 
iwlagn were affected, so as unfortunate as it was, disabling N until a proper 
fix available was the least bad option available.

-- 
iwlagn degrades quickly during normal wifi session
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/630748
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