On Thu, 13 Nov 2008 09:00:36 +0000 Vincenzo Ciancia <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
wrote:
>
>> If a distributor adds more goodies to the kernel, then be happy, but
>> that doesn't mean, that it really works...even when the distributor puts
>> the hardware on the list of supported hardware.
>> 
>
>I hope this is not really the idea of the ubuntu developers on this 
>topic, because if so, then I can really, really forget all my bugs, and 
>go home happy. If the idea is that a trial-and-error process should be 
>the normal way of using ubuntu (it is the way I use it every time I 
>install it to other people), then just tell me. I think it's 
>unbelievable how far things went in this direction. If this is 
>considered normal and unharmful, there's clearly something that I didn't 
>understand here.

Part of what goes on is that the details of a product change over time, 
where a specific part was made, or any number of things.  So when one 
person says (to pick one example, this is true for all vendors) IW 3945 is 
broken and another says it's not, they probably don't have identical cards.

We also have more than one kernel.  Maybe it works with i386, but is broken 
with amd64.

Use cases differ too.  I have a laptop with IW 4965 and it works great for 
me.  A lot of people reported problems on Intrepid with this card.  As it 
happens, I am mostly (maybe always) on 802.11G networks.  People with the 
problems have 802.11N (mostly anyway - see the other factors).

Part of the trouble with a hardware database is what to put in it to make 
it reliable, yet searchable.  So this is not an easy problem.  Back in Edgy 
I remember spending a lot of time digging through wiki pages trying to 
figure out wifi. Clearly we need to do better with this, but I'm not sure 
exactly how.

I think this may be a topic to take up with the QA team.

Scott K

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