what about having an option like?:  --enable-xembed (makes traditional
systray to work in a ugly way)

and so having it disabled by default, but optional for who needs it

i personally think that if we restrict some usabilities, ppl will move to,
let's say kde or gnome just because "it makes its needs working"



2014-11-04 12:52 GMT+01:00 Tom Hacohen <tom.haco...@samsung.com>:

> On 04/11/14 11:00, Michael Hughes wrote:
> > In Fedora, installing "libappindicator" and "libappindicator-gtk3" makes
> > the Network Manager Applet work without Xembed but the systray is all
> > messed up.  The first app loaded works properly but when you load
> > additional apps, you get distorted and overlapping icons which do not go
> > away entirely when the app is closed.  Restarting E fixes the current
> > problems but everything goes South again the next time you make any
> > change to the systray.  At any rate, it works a lot better with Xembed.
> > AppIndicator probably needs more work before Xembed is eliminated.
>
> Please report bugs. The thing about appindicator is that it's very easy
> to debug and solve (compared to xembed).
>
> --
> Tom.
>
>
>
>
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