Linked by Eugenia Loli on Fri 30th Jun 2006 19:19 UTC, submitted by Yadav Ji
Linux "Over the years, I've had a number of people asking me what I believe the problem was with further migration over to Linux by the public at large. To be frank, I don't believe that there is a simple answer to this. To me, there are a number of factors that play a role in keeping Linux out of the mainstream limelight" writes Matt Hartley in his opinion piece.
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RE[3]: Hmm..
by archiesteel on Sat 1st Jul 2006 21:46 UTC
archiesteel
Member since:
2005-07-02

I'd also point out that the Gnome and XFCE network panels do NOT detect nearby networks automatically, nor did the KDE one last time I checked (which was about three months ago).

It does now. As I'm typing this, I've got about half a dozen networks showing up in my knetworkmanager applet.

That said, yes; NetworkManager is a very NICE addition and fills the hole in a great many distros, but it STILL won't let you set a shared key properly.

I'm pretty sure shared keys are handled properly in the latest version. You should give it another try.

Again, this does highlight one of my main points: yes there are issues with Linux, but they do get fixed!

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