I also disagree because having both interfaces enabled is the opposite 
of the network manager primary goal, which was to manage wired / 
wireless connections for mobile desktop users (laptop) and assure 
everything would work plug'n'play.  It's the opposite of 
"configurations", "metric" and whatsoever human manipulation.  Of course 
it's not the choice of the OS to decide which connection you want to 
use, but network-manager isn't part of the OS.  Many in the OS Science 
community argue wheter file systems should be part of the OS or not 
(think of micro-kernels), so network-manager is still far from there.  
It's a utility package one can use or not, install or disinstall.

However there was a set of rules (it's not available on the web page 
anymore, but it was when the project started to explain how to users how 
network-manager would work) :

1- By default, wired will always be prefered over wireless
2- If no wire is present, choose wireless, and vice-versa
3- If both are available and a wireless network was EXPLICITELY chosen 
last time both were present, choose that wireless network (kind of 
"remember my preference" rule) else choose wired mode (default)

The rules enumerated back then only stated 1 of the devices would be 
active at a time, depending on the situation.  It would avoid having to 
manipulate the route table, or manually disable the wrong interface.  
I'm sure of it, that's why I was compiling/using network-manager since 
it's start, before I switch to Ubuntu(breezy) and before it was included 
in the default Ubuntu setup.  If 2 or more devices should be configured 
(bridge, gateway, etc), then it's probably not a mobile/laptop user and 
it should be done outside of network-manager (by disabling the roaming 
mode in the network configuration for instance).  Anyway such user would 
have plenty of network configuration knowledge to not need network-manager.

This bug will be close because the behaviour stated originally seemed to 
have disappared with the recent updates to the kernel and probably of 
the bcm43xx driver, but not because this wasn't a bug in the first place.

-- 
both wireless and wired connections are up after boot
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/94760
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