Update from my side (see my contributions above): after several
successful starts with kernel 3.11 instead of 3.13 I experienced a
completely new and unexpected behavior: the WiFi device was switched off
by software during boot and wasn't available anymore, even after a
reboot. I had to go to the BIOS (old non-UEFI BIOS) to switch it "on"
again. After another reboot the device was switched off again during the
boot phase and wasn't visible anymore during subsequent boot processes
so I had to go to the BIOS again only to find that the BIOS "WiFi" entry
was switched "off" again. So I had to modify its WiFi settings back to
"on" (I have no hardware killswitch for the WiFi, only a WiFi switch in
the BIOS). That was reproducible several times.

Finally I switched back to kernel 3.13 (standard Trusty kernel),
rebooted again - and suddenly everything worked - from the now visible
lxpanel indicator to the network - fine everything.

What for a strange behavior: a software that changes killswitch BIOS
entries during boot??? Is that allowed at all?

So for me to conclude on all this: sporadically I have WiFi,
sporadically I don't have. In the latter case obviously the lxpanel is
missing as well. The software alters the BIOS and I really cannot find
out why it does so. For me the observed behavior seems to be a lowlevel
(NetworkManager? / kernel module? ) problem rather than that of the
lxpanel...

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1308348

Title:
  network settings indicator missing from panel

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