-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA512 hi You know, I was just wondering a few days ago whether gnome supported this. I assumed it did, but because I don't have a metered connection it was hiding it from me. Here are my questions. 1, is there any standard decently reliable way to detect a metered connection? The easiest way would be if there were a flag set somewhere indicating this, but this is unlikely. 2, we'd need some way to set a cutoff. Beyond a certain point, gnome should limit network traphic or do it's best to watch and warn you if you're getting close to your limit. This brings up a host of problems though, which begins with the user knowing they have a metered connection and what the limit is. In my experience, connections aren't so much metered as in they only have so much fast data. That is, you usually get something like 3 gb of fast data. If you use it all, you can still use it, it just gets throttled, and you might get charged so much per gb. I think this should be solved but I've got no idea how. If it does, it should be in the network area. Maybe in the ipv4 or ipv6 area, and only show up if the connection is metered? Sorry I kind of jumped in in the middle. Thanks Kendell clark Michael Catanzaro wrote: > On Fri, 2015-08-07 at 10:56 +0930, Andrew Walton wrote: >> Please make this topic part of your discussions, there's a lot >> more people living in rural areas than you might think. > > I see this as a problem that needs to be solved, but I will be > blunt: somebody has to be interested in implementing it, and I am > not sure anybody is. > > I think the right place to add a new setting is the network panel: > you should be able to mark a particular connection as being > bandwidth -limited. Then at the *very least* that should be used to > turn off automatic checks for updates, since we get complaints > about that from bandwidth-limited users quite frequently. I am not > sure if we want to take the route of using the firewall to prevent > applications from accessing the network; it seems reasonable since > it would require toggling a hard-to-find setting, but some design > work would be needed to make the prompts work well. > > Michael > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iQIcBAEBCgAGBQJVxaTMAAoJEGYgJ5/kqBTdyQsQAIALFU/NSkGP3vS0MFamn/j7 sCamRrwyuVgXkqlSUpXlbWKDpFyos4mx0A3BwQ+OKxOk5caaq7U83o9CNBOatfjf CyumS28DOJd6NmOGmdKFBz68pFQOf/wh6NErokBgbpAHCHSyfTdjk8PDQUdtgw+A PqFxAGkoPKqeWuJwqC3xAwxITCCxCHu8Pzhu2/+BV3u8TOeGBFRuBTxIFXwb4/aL AaHYoiwRT00SQVG3S2znSYmsboVxQ+X4s9zeUjEbUOOIvcuWukfruCW4L+4tiNGE TZCpsDwg/5S2Orl/GNmd96+YEYvKUTW/Wm0NUrDM80XPRY0AX3NlwOObslhwLi6O IUZJiWMOZ0FskPnMCsf4fa7r9vkj14obov2slAVD0MCHVrYndZi+4/ZpOciyf4p1 Q2J9wEcOiYfpIjnFxhAZWU85ZIX4snezs9GPOS20kmGWng5UIZmzDZWT9fKhzNMe +z20IILaH6+NXhtkg837TAshkzikPhKYopT1nikwInY6/7bt5B5NgPwo34YefeqA xnId4mMQP7Ms7kns8Hnm5+0LRZpjjHwCezjx4AA/aU/Y5NfpJvCHYDpL+LNLeKBd cEU02tBynZjZtoDhnWBHcIKTyDkZDVHad721IGqDvWc2Xs5B6QxxQjSXcX4G7VS0 Dj2m2zRThJeUmiiVK9T3 =JtCi -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- -- desktop mailing list desktop@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop