I see your point, but don't currently see an easy solution. Ubuntu CPU governor is usually "performance", when the system boots for maximum speed during bootup. After 60 seconds (reasonably chosen boot time) the system explicitly switches the governor to "ondemand".
There is a small conflict here — if indicator-cpufreq chooses some frequency after you log in, Ubuntu system scripts may override it just a bit later, because of the above hardcoded behaviour, which is actually okay for many users. Thoughts?
I see your point, but don't currently see an easy solution. Ubuntu CPU governor is usually "performance", when the system boots for maximum speed during bootup. After 60 seconds (reasonably chosen boot time) the system explicitly switches the governor to "ondemand".
There is a small conflict here — if indicator-cpufreq chooses some frequency after you log in, Ubuntu system scripts may override it just a bit later, because of the above hardcoded behaviour, which is actually okay for many users. Thoughts?