Thank you, I'll go through that link carefully. However due to a problem not related to the OS, I ended up having to reinstall. Which fixed most of the problem, however there are still a few bugs that pop up occassionally when it comes to putting in a password. It either ask for a password when it shoudln't, or tells me my password is wrong three or four times before accepting it. I went with the Ubuntu 14.10 base, I may go back to the 14.04 base and see if that fixes it. I just haven't decided yet. 



Robby Kitchen

On Sun, Jan 4, 2015 at 8:57 AM, Lisi Reisz <lisi.reisz@gmail.com> wrote:
On Friday 02 January 2015 03:43:34 Michele Calgaro wrote:
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
> Hash: SHA512
>
> On 01/02/2015 03:52 AM, Dan Youngquist wrote:
> > On 01/01/2015 05:56 AM, Robby Kitchen wrote:
> >> I was just going through the Control Center exploring trying to get
> >> familiar with the settings, until I came across one, (I don't remember
> >> now which one), but it needed a password before I could open it to make
> >> changes. I put in the same password I had just used, but got an error
> >> message saying that wasn't the right password.
> >
> > Where TDE Control Center asks for a password, it needs the root password,
> > not the user's password.  At least, I've never seen it ask for the user's
> > password.
> >
> > It sounds like you may now have your user password munged up.  Can't help
> > you with that, except to suggest you try resetting it from a root shell
> > using passwd.
>
> I also suspect the same thing. If your user is a "normal user", changing
> some system settings requires root privileges. Some of the options in
> Control Center are like that, so when you are asked for a password it
> should say something like "insert root password". You need to provide the
> root's password, not your user's password.
>
> Please try again and if you still have errors, please post a screenshot of
> what you are doing and what the error looks like.

I had this problem on Linux Mint.  TDE Control Center asks for the
administrator password, which is of course the root password.  Ubuntu type
distros don't have a root password.  Here is the solution I found: (It
worked!)
http://sharadchhetri.com/2014/06/26/set-root-password-ubuntu-debian-linux-mint/

It might help those who are steeped in Ubuntu, if the Control Center asked for
a root password, and not for an administrator password.   It would make it
more obvious what was wanted and what was the problem.

Lisi

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