Revisiting and old gripe just to see if there are any new solutions:
In 2016 "KUser" was removed from Kubuntu and currently "usermode" provides the user management interface in System Settings. It is woefully inadequate for even basic user management. For example, KUser allowed admins to change group membership, home directory, login in and user ID names, password, default console shell, etc. and also had Group management functions. We currently can only change passwords and names.
Based on what info I can find, it seems the KDE/Plasma team dropped user management and shifted the responsibility for this functionality to the distro and/or DE development teams and Kubuntu has not fully addressed this functionality.
The best (least annoying) options I have found are either installing the LXQT user tool found here or to install Webmin.
It really smacks as similar to the many years worth of Ubiquity being, for want of a better word, garbage. IMO user management, like the distro installer, have a very high level of importance and shouldn't just be shunted off to terminal commands, some of which are not commonly known. What should take a few seconds to do - like adding a user to the "saned" group - becomes a dreaded task of web searching and hoping you don't forget the "-a -G" options in the terminal.
Opinions or suggestions wanted...
In 2016 "KUser" was removed from Kubuntu and currently "usermode" provides the user management interface in System Settings. It is woefully inadequate for even basic user management. For example, KUser allowed admins to change group membership, home directory, login in and user ID names, password, default console shell, etc. and also had Group management functions. We currently can only change passwords and names.
Based on what info I can find, it seems the KDE/Plasma team dropped user management and shifted the responsibility for this functionality to the distro and/or DE development teams and Kubuntu has not fully addressed this functionality.
The best (least annoying) options I have found are either installing the LXQT user tool found here or to install Webmin.
It really smacks as similar to the many years worth of Ubiquity being, for want of a better word, garbage. IMO user management, like the distro installer, have a very high level of importance and shouldn't just be shunted off to terminal commands, some of which are not commonly known. What should take a few seconds to do - like adding a user to the "saned" group - becomes a dreaded task of web searching and hoping you don't forget the "-a -G" options in the terminal.
Opinions or suggestions wanted...
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