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J.A. Watson

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Jamie's Random Musings

Various thoughts and adventures, including but not limited to Linux, Windows XP and Widows Vista, and assorted bits of hardware new and old.

Friday 13 November 2009, 2:13 PM

Shutdown/Reboot Ubuntu 9.10

Posted by J.A. Watson

Sometime during the Ubuntu 9.04 release, Canonical added a 60-second delay when Reboot or Shutdown was selected. At that time it was at least possible to go to the "User Switcher Preferences" and disable the delay. Now, with the 9.10 release, that disable option seems to have disappeared. I've been watching for it through the entire Alpha/Beta/RC release cycle, convinced that it would reappear sooner or later. As far as I can tell, it didn't - either that, or they have put it somewhere that I can't find it.

After considerable searching, head-scratching and digging, I finally found that it is accessible via a Gnome configuration setting. That means there are two ways to change it, and eliminate the delay:

- Open a console (terminal) window, and enter this command:

gconftool-2 -s '/apps/indicator-session/suppress_logout_restart_shutdown' --type bool true

- Press Alt-F2, enter gconf-editor, navigate to apps/indicator-session and set the value of suppress_logout_restart_shutdown to true.

It's Friday afternoon, I'm not in a particularly good mood, I've been irritated about this since the first Karmic Alpha release, and it's time for a rant. Why was this changed? Why was the option to disable it hidden away where it is unlikely to ever be found? If this is the way that Ubuntu administration is going to be moving in the future, we are headed right back to the days where people said "Linux is so obscure and confusing that only geeks can use it". Massive amounts of time and effort have been put in over the past few years just to get away from having to use apt or yum commands for package management, and now we're back to this kind of stuff for such a simple option? Bah. Humbug. End of rant.

For those who, like me, really object to having to click-away this enforced wait every time, now at least you know where and how to turn it off. Have a nice day.

jw 13/11/2009

Comments on this post

Indian-Art

Nice tip, thanks.

"Why was this changed? Why was the option to disable it hidden away where it is unlikely to ever be found? "

My guess is that, this could be an idea mooted & voted up in http://brainstorm.ubuntu.com/

Elementary, Mr. Watson. ;) Just kidding.

Posted by Indian-Art on Nov 13, 2009 4:14 PM

lezlow

i found with the new 9.10 you can install ubuntu studio and it gives you it back

Posted by lezlow on Nov 14, 2009 7:43 AM

Jake Rayson

It does seem that Karmic Koala has more than it's fair share of irritations. Far more than any previous release or have we all come to hold Ubuntu as a GNU/Linux benchmark?

Updated by Jake Rayson on Nov 17, 2009 10:27 AM

ator1940

Ubuntu popped up on the scene rather quickly, and became a major player. But, it is those little thing that keep me from using it as my primary OS. I don't mind using a terminal, and the command line is no stranger, but to a newbie this is not going to make them want to learn how to use Linux.

Posted by ator1940 on Nov 18, 2009 9:18 AM

J.A. Watson

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  • J.A. Watson
  • Applications Development, Subingen, Solothurn, Bern, Switzerland
  • Member since: November 2007

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