Originally Posted by deusexaethera I installed Ubuntu a couple of times. It was infuriating having to "sudo" all of the commands that I needed to execute under the Root account. They shouldn't have blocked that account from being used directly.It also would have been nice if my Postscript printer driver had worked. Not worked properly, worked at all.
Well, I kinda have to agree with the guy. Ubuntu's default protection of the root account is kinda stupid. However, most other Linuxes don't act like this. They require you to set up a root account and a user account. Which is much safer.
the easiest way I think is to just log in as regular user and if you need root access for something open a terminal and su into root
I don't think that's safer. Users would just try to login as root then.
If having a root account somehow forces people to log in as root on a regular basis, then these people are fucktards and shouldn't be allowed to leave their padded cells.
I think the difference is you can limit the power of a sudo user. (am I right ?)
Open dnsapi.dll (system32 folder) in notepad and you can see go.microsoft.com and other ip's that override your HOST file settings.