Dear patient, friendly admin,
I'm a not-too-bright user of computers and forums and things, and rarely follow a logical process of logging in first, and browsing the topics (or perhaps posting a response) second. Instead, I first discover that someone has a problem that looks like one I've solved, and then second I need to log in to the forum so I can attempt to help.
When this happens on the Ubuntu forum, it's no problem because the login script brings me back to the page where I was ready to post a reply. But, on this Kubuntu forum, my login leaves me at the "front door", and I must rely on an increasingly senile old memory to navigate back to the page where I observed the opportunity to help.
So, my suggestion is, can you make a little script for the login routine that will detect the page where the user was when he selected "login", and return him to that very same page upon verification of the password?
Yours in efficiency,
dibl
I'm a not-too-bright user of computers and forums and things, and rarely follow a logical process of logging in first, and browsing the topics (or perhaps posting a response) second. Instead, I first discover that someone has a problem that looks like one I've solved, and then second I need to log in to the forum so I can attempt to help.
When this happens on the Ubuntu forum, it's no problem because the login script brings me back to the page where I was ready to post a reply. But, on this Kubuntu forum, my login leaves me at the "front door", and I must rely on an increasingly senile old memory to navigate back to the page where I observed the opportunity to help.
So, my suggestion is, can you make a little script for the login routine that will detect the page where the user was when he selected "login", and return him to that very same page upon verification of the password?
Yours in efficiency,
dibl
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