Many, many thanks, Jesse, for the fix! I have been using an ASUS N-13
adaptor, and up to Ubuntu 17.04 had no trouble. At first I suspected the
adaptor and bought another one - quite unnecessarily as it turns out.
Fortunately I had my little old friend, an ASUS Eee (also running Ubuntu
17.04), to help me, and so I was able to use it to ferret about, finally
ending up at your posting. It worked! Evidently - and fortunately for me
- the "improvement" to the network manager doesn't affect the Eee wifi
card.

Couldn't agree more with the above comments about the irresponsibility
of the development team in fielding such a vital piece of software
without very careful and extensive testing. Shame on you lot! There are
probably a lot of ordinary users like me out there who just don't have a
clue what is happening now their network connection isn't working.

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You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Touch seeded packages, which is subscribed to network-manager in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1681513

Title:
  Ubuntu 17.04/17.10: New feature in NetworkManager stops several WiFi
  adapters from working (MAC Address Randomization issue)

Status in network-manager package in Ubuntu:
  Confirmed

Bug description:
  According to 
  
https://blogs.gnome.org/thaller/2016/08/26/mac-address-spoofing-in-networkmanager-1-4-0/
  there is a new privacy feature in the new version of NetworkManager.
  This privacy feature can cause some USB WiFi adapters to stop working
  while they used to work with older versions of NetworkManager (Ubuntu 16.10 
or older).

  The purpose of this privacy feature is to get your computer to report a new 
random MAC address whenever you connect to a WiFi network.
  This privacy feature is especially useful when you connect to public WiFi 
networks, so that the operators cannot identify you when you connect multiple 
times.

  The downside of this privacy feature is that some USB WiFi adapters misbehave 
when NetworkManager tries to change their MAC address repeatedly. 
  The result is that those USB WiFi adapters cannot connect anymore to the WiFi 
 network.

  Original report follows:

  My Panda USB wi-fi adapter works just fine on 16.10, but when I try to
  connect to my wi-fi router in 17.04, GNOME network manager reports
  "Connection failed." I did some tinkering, and noticed that my MAC
  address for my wifi adapter, according to GNOME, is DIFFERENT every
  time I make it forget my wifi settings and try to reconnect. Weird,
  right? Any leads on a possible fix or work-around?

  I'm running the latest beta of Ubuntu GNOME 17.04, kernel
  4.10.0-19-generic, GNOME 3.24.0.

  https://blogs.gnome.org/thaller/2016/08/26/mac-address-spoofing-in-
  networkmanager-1-4-0/

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