ralsina -- my suggestion might be mac-ish, I'm still getting used to the
ubuntu aesthetic, but FWIW here's what I'd do:

There shouldn't be a need for a number that means unlimited -- just unchecked 
means unlimited. 
If the box is unchecked, the selection box should be disabled, and the number 
in the box replaced with something like "unlimited" or "no limit". again, I 
don't know qt well, but in osx cocoa, that'd be grey text so you know you can't 
edit it, and the buttons of the text box would also be disabled.

I like lisette's suggestion of giving people context for what limit they might 
want - but why do people usually limit this? 
Do they actually want a choice like 'leave me enough bandwidth to watch 
youtube', or 'leave me enough bandwidth to browse the web quickly'?  That means 
we'd need some idea of what bandwidth they have, and how much of it we need to 
leave them so they can do what they want...

This is getting a little complex, but I wonder how many people have a good idea 
what number they want in there, and what that'd mean. If we can give them a way 
to say what their goal is and figure it out for them, that'd be a big 
improvement IMO. 
(It'd also be a big improvement over DB).

FINALLY, the holy grail is just to always do the right thing and not
need a preference. Can we 'nice' our network traffic so it uses max bw
unless some other app with higher priority is using it? That'll take
some research but doesn't that sound like something that ought to be
possible?

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/985484

Title:
  Qt control panel says kilobits per second, means kibibytes per second

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