2014-05-08 19:16, Nio Wiklund skrev:
> 2014-05-08 19:05, Pierre Gobin skrev:
>>
>> Le 08/05/2014 18:49, Nio Wiklund a écrit :
>>> 2014-05-08 18:31, Aere Greenway skrev:
>>>> On 05/08/2014 03:47 AM, Nio Wiklund wrote:
>>>>> When you started nm-applet (and it wouldn't work), did you run it with
>>>>> or without gksudo? Try with gksudo, if it you didn't.
>>>> Nio:
>>>>
>>>> I would tell you precisely, but I can only reproduce the problem by
>>>> running the live CD or live USB, and on those (test) systems, I don't
>>>> have access to my e-mail when I do that.
>>>>
>>>> I did not use a command-line interface to access it (I avoid that if at
>>>> all possible).
>>>>
>>>> I right-clicked on the panel (in an area without any icon, and chose
>>>> "Add/Remove Panel Items" from the pop-up menu.
>>>>
>>>> I then clicked the "Add" button of the "Panel Preferences" window that
>>>> appeared (with the "Panel Applets" tab selected).  I don't normally have
>>>> to do this, because the network (or wireless) icon is already in the
>>>> panel when the live CD (or USB) finishes booting.
>>>>
>>>> I then selected "Manage Networks" from the list of available plugins,
>>>> and clicked the "Add" button.
>>>>
>>>> I then selected "Network Status Monitor" from the list of available
>>>> plugins, and clicked the "Add" button.
>>>>
>>>> Then I fumbled around with those additional applets, right or left
>>>> clicking on them, and in one combination, I actually got a list of
>>>> wireless networks, of which I selected my network, and tried to connect
>>>> to it (by clicking on it?).
>>>>
>>>> A simple dialog appeared, asking me to enter the "Encryption key" in a
>>>> text box, which I carefully typed in (because I can't see what I'm
>>>> typing), and hit the enter-key (or clicked the button to process the
>>>> information).
>>>>
>>>> Nothing appeared to happen.  There was no error message, but the network
>>>> did not connect, and the icon didn't change in any way indicating it was
>>>> trying to connect.
>>>>
>>>> With that not working, I specified "System Tools" (or maybe it was
>>>> "Preferences") from the task-bar menu, and then selected "Network
>>>> Connections" (or something like that).
>>>>
>>>> That yielded a simple dialog with 3 tabs, and nothing like what I've
>>>> used in the past to configure a wireless network.  In that simple
>>>> dialog, I did not discover anything that would let me configure a
>>>> wireless network.
>>>>
>>> Hi again Aere,
>>>
>>> It works for me with
>>>
>>> gksudo nm-applet &
>>>
>>> from a terminal window in Lubuntu 14.04 LTS. This is 'a tweak' included
>>> in the OBI tarball described here
>>>
>>> http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2172971&p=13016768#post13016768
>>>
>>> Best regards
>>> Nio
>>>
>>
>> I saw many users with problems to connect to networks after running
>> "nm-applet" with root permissions.
>>
>> To have nm-applet at startup, I only added "nm-applet" in "Default apps
>> for LXSession", in the tab "Autostart". This solved the problem.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Pierre Gobin
>>
>>
> Hi Pierre,
> 
> This is quite messy. How come it works better with root permissions in
> some cases and without root permissions in other cases?
> 
> Anyway I will try your solution and let you know the result.
> 
> Best regards
> Nio
> 
Hi again Pierre,

I tested in a one year old Toshiba laptop, and your method works. It
stores the text nm-applet in

.config/lxsession/Lubuntu/autostart

which is straight-forward. So at least in this computer, both methods
seem to work, and then it is better to avoid root permissions.

Best regards
Nio

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