Michael, the converse problem is that you open System Settings, or the Network menu, and you can't see which network is active because it's off the bottom of the screen. When I specified the network menu, I addressed this problem by saying it should show a maximum of 6 networks (always including the active one, if any), so that there would be no scrolling. But that subtlety has been lost since, and anyway, it wouldn't work for System Settings which doesn't have the luxury of showing only a subset of networks.
Anyway, I suggest that when you choose a network, it should stay put. After any authentication, a spinner should appear. Then finally when the network actually connects, it should ascend smoothly into the "Connected to:" slot, while the previously active network, if any, descends to its alphabetical position.
Michael, the converse problem is that you open System Settings, or the Network menu, and you can't see which network is active because it's off the bottom of the screen. When I specified the network menu, I addressed this problem by saying it should show a maximum of 6 networks (always including the active one, if any), so that there would be no scrolling. But that subtlety has been lost since, and anyway, it wouldn't work for System Settings which doesn't have the luxury of showing only a subset of networks.
Anyway, I suggest that when you choose a network, it should stay put. After any authentication, a spinner should appear. Then finally when the network actually connects, it should ascend smoothly into the "Connected to:" slot, while the previously active network, if any, descends to its alphabetical position.