NetworkManager, ASUS led

2008-01-22 Thread Howard Chu
Following up on this thread http://lists.kde.org/?l=kde-develm=120099366404038w=2 KDE's kwifimanager was explicitly patched to toggle the Wireless LED on/off on Asus notebooks. It seems that the function really belongs in NetworkManager instead. I patched my copy of NetworkManager 0.6.5 to add

Re: Couple of issues with trunk

2008-01-22 Thread Robert Piasek
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Steev Klimaszewski wrote: nm-applet does not appear to be parallel make safe. make[3]: *** No rule to make target `../../src/utils/libutils.la', needed by `test-crypto'. Stop I was finally able to get dbus system activation working on Gentoo -

Re: kubuntu other ysers bug

2008-01-22 Thread Eddie Armstrong
Eddie Armstrong wrote: Can anyone tell me why other users (other than primary user) cannot log onto the internet using knetworkmanager? Thanks for your help and for all the polite replies ___ NetworkManager-list mailing list

Re: Clarification of key terminaology.

2008-01-22 Thread Beso
the passphrase generates an ascii key that then is used to authenticate. the passphrase generally can contain spaces, while key usually don't. 2008/1/22, Aaron Konstam [EMAIL PROTECTED]: I am still unclear as to what is the difference between ASCII key and a passphrase? Can the latter have

Clarification of key terminaology.

2008-01-22 Thread Aaron Konstam
I am still unclear as to what is the difference between ASCII key and a passphrase? Can the latter have blanks in it or what? -- -- === Depart in pieces, i.e., split.

Re: NetworkManager, ASUS led

2008-01-22 Thread Dan Williams
On Tue, 22 Jan 2008, Howard Chu wrote: Following up on this thread http://lists.kde.org/?l=kde-develm=120099366404038w=2 KDE's kwifimanager was explicitly patched to toggle the Wireless LED on/off on Asus notebooks. It seems that the function really belongs in NetworkManager instead. I

Re: Clarification of key terminaology.

2008-01-22 Thread Dan Williams
On Tue, 22 Jan 2008, Ryan Novosielski wrote: -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 ASCII and hex keys go together in that one is just the opposite representation of the other. I believe 40-bit is 5 chars long in ASCII and 128-bit is 13 chars, but I could be messing that up. I

Re: Clarification of key terminaology.

2008-01-22 Thread Dan Williams
On Tue, 22 Jan 2008, Aaron Konstam wrote: I am still unclear as to what is the difference between ASCII key and a passphrase? Can the latter have blanks in it or what? Both can. ASCII keys/passwords must be either 5 or 13 characters in length (depending on whether you're using 40/64 bit

Re: Any way to choose a specific AP?

2008-01-22 Thread Helmut Schaa
Hi, Am Dienstag, 22. Januar 2008 04:57:36 schrieb Dan Williams: On Mon, 2008-01-21 at 15:34 -0500, Ryan Novosielski wrote: -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 There are two access points near me, both named linksys, one of which works when I connect to and one that doesn't.

Re: Clarification of key terminaology.

2008-01-22 Thread Ryan Novosielski
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Dan Williams wrote: On Tue, 22 Jan 2008, Ryan Novosielski wrote: ASCII and hex keys go together in that one is just the opposite representation of the other. I believe 40-bit is 5 chars long in ASCII and 128-bit is 13 chars, but I could be