As Scott says and moreover.  Ubuntu could have "solved" this trivially.
Ubuntu decided to package a broken version of GDM when an older
functional version exists that is totally compatable and already working
and in place in older versions of Ubuntu.

The purpose of an "upgrade" to an operating system is to *improve*
functionality not *remove* functionality.  All they had to do was leave
the working GDM in place until the functionality was actually *improved*
in the newer version.  The reason we use things like Ubuntu is because
we have an expectation that they have a vetting process to prevent stuff
like this from happening giving us a smooth upgrade process.  When you
have a shop with 15 odd thin clients running X-servers, you upgrade, and
nobody can now use the system until you jump thru hoops and replace
packages and stuff, you kind of defeated the purpose of using Ubuntu in
the first place. . .

Overall the improvments for use on my laptop and netbook are pretty
stunning.  It's just that one of my primary uses of a clean desktop
system is to run thin X-clients, which is now kind of broken "out-of-
the-box".  We are not complaining about gdm-2.30, we are complaining
that Ubuntu put it in the fragging "long-term-stable" distro *broken*.

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No option to log in remotely via XDMCP
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/408417
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