Looks like the wireless drop bug is here: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/911059
That bug report claims this was fixed late in the 12.04 release cycle. I'd suggest trying either 12.04 with all software updates applied, or the development version of 12.10. adam On Wed, Sep 19, 2012 at 7:02 AM, Scott Cove <[email protected]> wrote: On a side note: Actually the network drop is a known issue with intel wireless N cards. I'm on mobile at the moment so unable to find bug but there is a known workaround to this, so long as you can put up with wireless G speeds only. Find the driver, or module, by using iwconfig - in my case I know I have the module iwlwifi. To disable wireless N to see if it fixes problem, type these into a terminal window: sudo rmmod iwlwifi (or whatever module is confit spits out) sudo modprobe iwlwifi 11n_disable=1 What I have done is made myself a simple bash script with those two lines so that when I connect to an N network I can disable it and run at G speeds without failure. Hope this helps, Scott Sent from my iPhone On 19/09/2012, at 11:21 PM, Adam Dingle wrote: > > > On Wed, Sep 19, 2012 at 5:56 AM, Farrukh Najmi wrote: > > Hi Guys, > > I had upgraded to Shotwell 0.12.3 as a part of upgrade to Ubuntu 12.04. Later > I ran into network drop problems in Ubuntu 12.04 and 11.10 that drove my > productivity to near zero. So I reverted back to Ubuntu 11.04 and Shotwell > 0.11.6. > > Now when I run shotwell I get: > > "Your photo library is not compatible with this version of Shotwell. It > appears it was created by Shotwell 0.12.3 (schema 15). This version is 0.11.6 > (schema 14). Please use the latest version of Shotwell." > > Is there a way to build latest shotwell on Ubuntu 11.04? > > Not easily. Shotwell 0.12 depends on libraries found only in Ubuntu 11.10 and > higher. Similarly, the upcoming Shotwell 0.13 (or the pre-release 0.12.90) > depends on libraries found only in Ubuntu 12.04 and higher. > > By reverting back to an older Ubuntu you may not be able to run the latest > versions of lots of useful programs. Instead, you could try upgrading to the > development version of Ubuntu 12.10 (Quantal Quetzal). I've been running it > every day for months now with few problems. If the network drop problems are > still occurring there, you could file a bug report with Ubuntu. > > adam > _______________________________________________ > Shotwell mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.yorba.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/shotwell _______________________________________________ Shotwell mailing list [email protected] http://lists.yorba.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/shotwell
