On 07/04/2018 02:28 AM, KatolaZ wrote:
On Wed, Jul 04, 2018 at 02:15:46AM -0700, Jimmy Johnson wrote:
[cut]
I used wicd for several years, and I had always to swear against the
gods of three or four religions to have it do what I wanted. The
hardest thing was to convince wicd that I wanted a *specific* wi-fi
connection among the several available: it kept choosing what it
preferred, probably on the basis of "signal strength", and kept
disconnecting and reconecting every time somebody entered the room or
moved a chair. I had to manually disable the connections I didn't want
to use, then manually re-enable them.
That sounds like network manager was installed at the time and not a wicd
problem, wicd gets blamed because you can see it in your tray, while NM is
in the background messing with your connection.
I may be wrong but I don't think network manager is good or helpful in any
way, causes way to many problems and confusion for the average user.
I don't know about you, but I always know exactly, at any point in
time, what software is installed in my system. And I am 100% sure that
network-manager has *never* been installed in any of the machines I
have administered or used in the last 20 years :)
So the fault was genuinely due to wicd, and my swearing was more than
justified ;)
If network/interfaces is not configured then wicd will not work.
--
Jimmy Johnson
Devuan Jessie - KDE 4.14.2 - AMD A8-7600 - EXT4 at sda2
Registered Linux User #380263
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