Is it just Kubuntu, or is Ubuntu also so utterly cyptic? If so, exactly who does Canonical think is going to USE this OS, given that the Internet is now a universal appliance? How can I advise my computer-naive friends and associates to load 'buntu as an alternative to WinXP if I myself, after about 7 years of Kubuntu, still am so easily baffled by what I'm looking at onscreen? I don't get it.
I have a clear install of 14.04 on my netbook. Of course, that wiped out my network settings, which I somehow fuddled through back when dinosaurs roamed the earth. Hoping that by now someone, somewhere, had figured out a way to walk actual humans through this wireless setup business, I left-click on the new, improved networking systray icon and immediately see 3 checkboxes which cannot be altered in any way I can discover. One of them, the tooltip informs me, indicates that wireless is disabled (and, no, you can't do anything about it...), which of course is why I'm looking at it in the first place.
I look in the KDE Help center accessible from the default launch menu. Concerning networking, there is stuff there that would doubtless delight a CS major, but does nothing whatsoever for me. There is nothing that I can find which tells me what to do with the networking interface I'm staring at. This is "help" center? For whom?
Mr. Google also appears to know nothing much. I did find something here, but it's hardly official documentation, and besides it's not for humans. It refers to a "Network Manager" - which does not come up in a search either of the default launch menu or the System Settings interface, and it invites me to modify several configuration files. No thanks. I'm already in enough trouble, and besides if I have to do THAT just to get wireless working on 14.04 something's terribly wrong.
So here I am once again, hoping for some help. I can tell you that I do have a static IP address - 74.120.32.78, a Netgear router, and I can easily get a router status page displayed in my browser that give me all kinds of port addresses and names and stuff that out to be useful...to someone. The problem is that the acronyms on the router status page do not well match, or match at all, those on the Connection Editor interface I get when clicking on the wrench in the network icon popup menu.
I await higher wisdom!
I have a clear install of 14.04 on my netbook. Of course, that wiped out my network settings, which I somehow fuddled through back when dinosaurs roamed the earth. Hoping that by now someone, somewhere, had figured out a way to walk actual humans through this wireless setup business, I left-click on the new, improved networking systray icon and immediately see 3 checkboxes which cannot be altered in any way I can discover. One of them, the tooltip informs me, indicates that wireless is disabled (and, no, you can't do anything about it...), which of course is why I'm looking at it in the first place.
I look in the KDE Help center accessible from the default launch menu. Concerning networking, there is stuff there that would doubtless delight a CS major, but does nothing whatsoever for me. There is nothing that I can find which tells me what to do with the networking interface I'm staring at. This is "help" center? For whom?
Mr. Google also appears to know nothing much. I did find something here, but it's hardly official documentation, and besides it's not for humans. It refers to a "Network Manager" - which does not come up in a search either of the default launch menu or the System Settings interface, and it invites me to modify several configuration files. No thanks. I'm already in enough trouble, and besides if I have to do THAT just to get wireless working on 14.04 something's terribly wrong.
So here I am once again, hoping for some help. I can tell you that I do have a static IP address - 74.120.32.78, a Netgear router, and I can easily get a router status page displayed in my browser that give me all kinds of port addresses and names and stuff that out to be useful...to someone. The problem is that the acronyms on the router status page do not well match, or match at all, those on the Connection Editor interface I get when clicking on the wrench in the network icon popup menu.
I await higher wisdom!
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