Two questions. One about getting wifi-radar to work from a Gnome desktop icon, the other about performance of Centrino chipsets under Linux in general. I've managed to get wifi-radar 1.9.3 working on my IBM Thinkpad R51... from the command line. Uncommenting 4 lines of the wifi-radar Python source to use dhclient (and switching the last 2 of these around), using /etc rather than /etc/conf.d to store the config file, and changing the interface to eth1 seems to do the trick. Then sudo'ing so that I could run everything from my normal user account. However, I can't for love nor money get the python script to invoke from a Gnome icon (the CLI version seems to keep status messages going back to the terminal window every few seconds). Any ideas how to change my sudo /usr/sbin/wifi-radar --config command line associated with the icon to tip any screen output down a black hole? Or is there something else i'm doing wrong?? Once I fix that, it's just performance I need to attend to. I can get 80-90Kb/s on Windows XP, but peak at 9Kb/s on RHEL WS 4 at the moment with an identical hardware set-up (Centrino on the Thinkpad, Linksys WAG54G as the wireless router). Anyone know if Intel have released more up to date drivers?? Ian W. -- Ian Waring - Simplicity Sells! ian.waring@xxxxxxxxx -- redhat-list mailing list unsubscribe mailto:redhat-list-request@xxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/redhat-list