On Fri, 8 Jan 2010 23:53:59 +0100 Steve Dodier <[email protected]> wrote:
> 2010/1/8 J. Anthony Limon <[email protected]> > > > Network Manager is a tricky topic so I'll try to make this as > > unbiased as possible. > > > > WICD offers a solid replacement to NetworkManager while keeping > > almost all the features. The only thing I can think of that would > > keep someone from switching outright is that Network Manager has > > built-in VPN support. After a poll of some sort we could then > > decide if we also needed to ship a VPN client by default. > > > > Also, since the next release is LTS it might make sense to wait to > > make the switch as going from NetworkManager to WICD is as easy as > > apt-get --purge autremove networkmanager > > > > - J > > > > Despite the fact that I'm myself using wicd in one of my computers, > there is a slight difference between wicd and networkmanager that we > may not forget: the quality of the GUI. > > I've rarely seen an app with a GUI as unwelcoming and badly designed > as wicd, even though it has a great backend. I think nm does the job > in 99% of the cases, so switching to something that is harder to > learn and use is not, in my opinion, a good idea at all for an > end-user distribution. > While I will agree it's not as "pretty" as some apps, it's entirely user friendly. As soon as you open it, it greets you with a list of available networks and button that says CONNECT. Also, 2.0 should have a new GUI, which if we're going to let NM remain in Lucid should provide perfect timing. - J -- xubuntu-devel mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/xubuntu-devel
