Hi guys,
I'm thinking about installing 22.04 (when released) on a customer machine. I already tried with 20.04 but couldn't get it working as expected due to two must-have features that kept me stuck with 14.04 (I know, I know...):
1) The possibility to autologin into a locked session. A couple applications have to auto start but only authorized personnel must have physical access to the session. Others can only press the power button.
2) The possibility to automount all drives including external disks (between internal and external it's about a dozen partitions over 7/8 disks) without having to click anywhere, even for new disks. The programs have to have them available with no user intervention. Kde has this feature and it works like a charm in 14.04 (well, 99% of the time which is good enough). In 20.04, on the same machine, it's useless. It works once in a lifetime, the other times the session just hangs on an empty screen with only the background image and the mouse cursor. No taskbar, no nothing. 14.04 when unable to mount gives up that disk and goes on without freezing (which is less than optimal but still acceptable). And I suspect 22.04 is no better in this regard.
If there are no builtin methods it's fine to install third party utilities and/or fiddle with some conf file as long as, once done, it works reliably because each time a problem occurs, some poor sod has to drive 85 kilometers (about 50 miles for you imperial guys) to go fix it and the same to get back... it had better be not too often.
I won't bore you with the details but that's how it has to be. It's my customer request (for good reasons I might add) and so I can't, for example, decide to change how people do stuff there. It works with Kubuntu 14.04 no problems. The customer expects no less from newer release and now I can no longer delay the upgrade (before anyone berates me, I would do a clean install). Either that or I'll have to install windows as it can handle those two necessities with the help of a little utility for the autologin.
Do you have any suggestion?
Thanks
PS: Please do not redirect me to xkcd dot com/1172/. Those requests are legitimate necessities in the work environment of the customer.
I'm thinking about installing 22.04 (when released) on a customer machine. I already tried with 20.04 but couldn't get it working as expected due to two must-have features that kept me stuck with 14.04 (I know, I know...):
1) The possibility to autologin into a locked session. A couple applications have to auto start but only authorized personnel must have physical access to the session. Others can only press the power button.
2) The possibility to automount all drives including external disks (between internal and external it's about a dozen partitions over 7/8 disks) without having to click anywhere, even for new disks. The programs have to have them available with no user intervention. Kde has this feature and it works like a charm in 14.04 (well, 99% of the time which is good enough). In 20.04, on the same machine, it's useless. It works once in a lifetime, the other times the session just hangs on an empty screen with only the background image and the mouse cursor. No taskbar, no nothing. 14.04 when unable to mount gives up that disk and goes on without freezing (which is less than optimal but still acceptable). And I suspect 22.04 is no better in this regard.
If there are no builtin methods it's fine to install third party utilities and/or fiddle with some conf file as long as, once done, it works reliably because each time a problem occurs, some poor sod has to drive 85 kilometers (about 50 miles for you imperial guys) to go fix it and the same to get back... it had better be not too often.
I won't bore you with the details but that's how it has to be. It's my customer request (for good reasons I might add) and so I can't, for example, decide to change how people do stuff there. It works with Kubuntu 14.04 no problems. The customer expects no less from newer release and now I can no longer delay the upgrade (before anyone berates me, I would do a clean install). Either that or I'll have to install windows as it can handle those two necessities with the help of a little utility for the autologin.
Do you have any suggestion?
Thanks
PS: Please do not redirect me to xkcd dot com/1172/. Those requests are legitimate necessities in the work environment of the customer.
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