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We do our best to release products which suit a wide variety of use cases
no doubt about that!
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to micro-manage each and every possibility and use case that pops up.
sorry, but I am rather talking about
general usability! At its current state the Efika is a discouraging experience. IMHO its rather Canonical/Ubuntu to blame, why else would they start developing Unity2D?
Accordingly shouldn't we get real too and discuss whether Ubuntu's GDM is the best choice for ARM currently?
I mean ARM-computing means reduction in hardware, so why not reduce the amount of software as well? Gnome produces a lot of dependencies...
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Regarding the unsolicited connection to a WLAN, that is something that can not happen.
This is what I thought too so far.
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Are you sure the person in question didn't manually connect to it, and then save it?
100% sure.
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In any case, you can always delete the connection.
Via terminal, editing the resource file for sure. Did you look at my screen shot? Looks like a mayor bug to me!
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The best way to switch off WLAN (and wireless in general) is using the physical switch on the left hand side of the Netbook.
This switch is very important, since it's off/on restart provides the only way to reconnect Mobile Broadband which at regular intervals gets lost.
Another discouraging bug.
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You say "Wouldn't it be better to start with a smaller system which has less bugs?".
Yeah. KISS-principle.
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we have to go with Ubuntu for a couple of reasons:
...
who's going to maintain and test that to every new OS update?
Another truism: Never change a running system!
The problem of PowerDevelopers should rather be: how do I get Efika software running stable than to cope with the release cycle of Ubuntu.
Let me be frank: if a friend would ask me today whether he/she should buy this smartbook I would recommend her to wait until its teething troubles are over. At its current stage the Efika package provides an unpleasant user experience and is unmanageable for a beginner. The most striking example I have put on top, inclusive screens.
I should add that sometimes it takes me 10min to get the smartbook ready for work as it likes to freeze during log-in. Also moving through the pull-down menu into the sub-sub-level has frozen my system. No other exit than switch-off possible.
Once I ended up with this display:
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How can I explain the mess in Synaptic?
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Normal users should not use Synaptic directly, but rather, use the Ubuntu Software Center. The Debian stuff makes sense since Ubuntu is based on it.
I think we both agree than Synaptic is the best package manager of all distros even since it is simple.
But it seems that elements of the Genesi repository classify as "obsolete" or "residual". That confuses me and makes we wonder if I can still distinguish the necessary from the obsolete when e.g. installing xfce-desktop and wanting to remove gnome-desktop.
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Let's try to help you out on some specific issues you have. You mentioned in the topic you need help with XFCE/LXDE? I have build systems in the past around a combination of both (XFWM rocks), and works great with a subset of LXDE or even a properly configured Cairo-dock. Perhaps this would be more suitable for your target group?
If you can provide an image I would really like to test it.
Cheers