This bug is valid after all. It appears that Ubuntu Touch is unable to
connect to network that have long passwords. I'm tired of trying but a
16 digit password works. 17-19 I don't know about. If the password is 20
digits or longer, the OS is totally unable to use the Access Point. A
major issue as
This bug can be deleted. It appears the problem is the phone cannot
connect to 5GHz networks.
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Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to network-manager in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1564135
Title:
Ubuntu
Public bug reported:
There are some wifi access points that I have to connect to for work.
They have 63 digit passwords with special characters. Ubuntu Desktop has
no problem connecting. But Ubuntu Touch is unable to connect at all.
At home, I configured a router with a similar password and Ubunt
This would be a much more efficient and clean network-indicator design
arrangement:
Wi-Fi Networks
-currently connected network
Disconnect
-previously connected network
-previously connected network
More Networks
-never before connected network
-never before connected network
-never before conne
Public bug reported:
The summary pretty much tells the tale: users are forced to wade through
unknown networks to single out the network/s they have previously
connected to in the past.
I go to a location. Twenty some networks are available. Most of them
appear in the "More Networks" folder. Five
This bug also exists in ubuntu 15.04 (Vivid Vervet).
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/144
Title:
Clicking the nautilus icon for focusing a window of an ext
System-related communications should present in the upper-right corner
at the indicators. The indicators exist as an interface layer between
the System and the User.
Application-related communications should present at the Launcher.
The requirement that the computer be rebooted is a System-relate
@ James Anslow, no because it's not signal strength that defines the
significance of the network to the user. The user is making connection
decisions based on the identity of the network. Even in a context where
a user is trying to select between several free networks, signal
strength may or may no
** Description changed:
When a user clicks the network manager indicator, a dropdown appears and
lists wifi networks. This menu should NOT display networks that the user
has never connected to. Networks the user has never connected to should
- only display in the "More networks" folder. At a
** Summary changed:
- Networks I have never connected to should be confined to the "More Networks"
folder
+ Networks I have never connected to should be confined to an "Unknown
Networks" folder
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<>
No, this is not accurate.
1) there are lots of users who do not want networks connecting automatically,
so they manually select the network they want.
2) even if Ubuntu is set to automatically connect to networks, if there are
more than one network in range that a user regularly connects to,
Well there are several problems with your argument concerning people are
too dumb/lazy to read stuff.
First, most of the networks already appear in the "More networks" folder
because there are so many. 5 or 6 get shuffled into the visible space
from the dozens that live in the "More networks" fold
Public bug reported:
When a user clicks the network manager indicator, a dropdown appears and
lists wifi networks. This menu should NOT display networks that the user
has never connected to. Networks the user has never connected to should
only display in the "More networks" folder. At a mininum, t
Let me first draw attention to the edit I made to my initial Bug
Description: I have expanded the Bug scope to the fact that the popup-
dialog repeats itself AND the power-cog icon does not turn red. After a
system updates, only one restart-popup should present (it serves
informational purposes whi
** Description changed:
+ Bug = the restart-popup-dialog that sometimes occurs after a system-
+ update should only run once. If the user declines to reboot from the
+ popup, then the power-cog should turn red until reboot occurs. Repeated
+ popups asking to reboot should not occur.
+
In ubuntu
Thanks for the reply, Matthew.
1) closing and opening the lid to cause sleep is unrelated to this
matter. Regardless of Suspend use, if a user intends to shutdown/restart
the computer, the power-cog is where the GUI user is going to go. If a
user never shuts down or restarts unless explicitly prom
>Matthew Paul Thomas said:
>The red icon dates from the era when the rightmost menu was a "device menu",
>trying to cover everything from attached >printers to external displays to
>software updates to screen locking, which was absurd. Nowadays everything to
>do with software >updates is integra
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