There should be no additional demands for password from 22 than from 21.Installed Mint 22.2, hated it for all the password demands, reloaded Mint 21 and fell back in love with Mint.
Thanks, the problem wasn't with startup or shutdown. It was even in the middle of using an application. No worries! Back to Mint 21.There should be no additional demands for password from 22 than from 21.
When shutting down, if there are any apps still open/running, Mint will show them on the screen.
if this is not happening, I would take a guess that either Fastboot or Secure Boot are still enabled.
Of the two, I would think maybe fastboot would be the culprit.
Tap the appropriate key to enter the bios from startup. Locate both secure boot and fastboot and disable them
I forget the brand of pc/laptop you have....hence the list below:
How to get into BIOS?
Acer: F2 or DEL
ASRock: F2 or DEL
ASUS: F2 for all PCs, F2 or DEL for motherboards
Dell: F2 or F12
ECS: DEL
Gigabyte/Aorus: F2 or DEL
HP: F10 or ESC
Lenovo (Consumer Laptops): F2 or Fn + F2
Lenovo (Desktops): F1
Lenovo (ThinkPads): Enter then F1
MSI: DEL
Microsoft Surface Tablets: Press and hold the volume up button
Origin PC: F2
Samsung: F2
Toshiba: F2
Zotac: DEL
Tap the key immediately after hitting the start button
When you turn off secure boot, fastboot, etc etc....BE SURE to SAVE those changes....usually by tapping F10...
sudo nano /etc/group
sudo:x:27:yourusername
As the downloader, the maker of the install medium, the installer who set myself up as administrator, I've never had to tell the thing who I am after installation. Anyway - no quarrels, I'll just go back to what works (and by the way looks better). I just assumed the issues with 22.2 wanting my password all the time, were part of the world-wide tightening of security. But you know what? I think you're right, the thing acted as if I didn't have sudo rights.Its probably because his account doesn't have sudo rights.
Code:sudo nano /etc/group
You have to make sure your user account is listed for sudo in the above file.
Code:sudo:x:27:yourusername
If it isn't its a simple matter of typing your username in the sudo line and saving the file.
sudo usermod -aG sudo username
Thank you! I'll just hang with 21 for a while, it's so good.The problem with Mint 22.2 is kernel 6.14...you can remove this one and install Kernel 6.8 or go back to Mint 22.1. View attachment 28676
I do apologize! Sorry about hijacking the thread.Just a heads up folks - the problems @Scribe1 has experienced between two point versions of Linux Mint are not on topic with what the OP was asking about, namely about hanging on shutdown.
Please stay on topic.
TIA
Wizard