=== jfsimon1981_b is now known as jfsimon [22:18] you all need to stop breaking shit every 6 months by changing things that already work like network configuration, whats the point is changing something that works perfect? Just to break the shit out of it? Why are you all even doing this? New idiot devs gotta make their mark? [22:19] When was the switch to netplan done for desktop, because you all broke networking, awesome job! [22:19] netplan will consistently create extra yaml files for the SAME WIFI NETWORK because it is incompetent [22:19] Takes me back to Windows XP days of the kernel installing the same NIC over and over again... Network Adapter #27! [22:20] I have 3 yaml files for the SAME NETWORK [22:20] I deleted them and it created 7 [22:20] GREAT WORK [22:21] what was wrong with interfaces files, network manager and even ifconfig (not even installed by default now? net-tools? WTF?) Are you all insane? [22:22] awesome job breaking something that has worked for 20+ years [22:23] pretty simple, stop changing stuff that has a big chance of breaking shit... [22:24] This has been happening for 10+ years where you all break SOMETHING every 6 months, like clockwork, first it was XORG and GPU Drivers, then Unity/GDM3, then networking, what's next? [22:26] I honestly think there is someone malicious behind these decisions that is trying to destroy Ubuntu / Canonical [22:26] That's the ONLY explanation [22:27] EVERY release is initially broken somewhere with something [22:27] The ONLY consistent thing is that you can guarantee something will break [22:28] You can't call this trolling since IT"S BEEN TRUE FOR 10+ YEARS! [22:29] Canonical has been trolling Linux users for over a decade now [22:29] I'm done and never using your POS OS ever TF AGAIN [22:32] worhtless [22:32] worthless [22:37] And this, my friends, is a classic example of how to not make open source developers want to help you. Screenshot this monologue and share it with someone the next time they yell and scream at you because your code doesn't work for their use case.