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How to Disable Login Sound in Ubuntu Oneiric [Quick Tips]

Damien 15th Sep 2011 Linux 16 Comments
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login-sound-disable-smallIf you are one of the early users who have already upgraded to Ubuntu 11.10 Oneiric, you will discover that the startup login sound is activated by default. Worst still, there is no way that you can turn it off.

The reason for this is because the login sound entry (in the Startup Applications) is hidden by default. Why is it hidden is unknown, but here’s how you can unhide (and disable) it.

Note: This is an annoyance found in Ubuntu Oneiric beta. It might (or might not) be fixed in the final release.

1. Open a terminal and type in the command:

gksudo gedit /usr/share/gnome/autostart/libcanberra-login-sound.desktop

2. At the end of the file, change the “NoDisplay” from “true” to “false” (without the quote). Save and close the file.

login-sound-desktop-entry

3. Now, go to the Startup Application (from the power icon at the top right corner) and you should see the Gnome Login Sound entry. Uncheck it.

login-sound-disable-startup

That’s it.

via Ubuntu Forums

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16 Comments

  • Daniel

    Would be easier to just execute the following command from a terminal:
        gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.sound event-sounds false

    30th September 2011 12:08:00 Reply

    • Damien Oh

      Thanks. It would be better to have the GUI so you can turn on/off easily.

      30th September 2011 12:36:00 Reply

  • Bob

    Thanks for the tip. For some reason this has not been fixed in the final release.

    15th October 2011 11:39:00 Reply

  • Anonymous

    THANK YOU!!!!!!!!111one!11!

    You saved my ears!!!

    17th October 2011 02:55:00 Reply

  • SATXan

    Thanks!  Agree this should have been in the final release.

    21st October 2011 11:29:00 Reply

  • Azhar Hafiz

    thanks !

    21st October 2011 04:35:00 Reply

  • Sreekanth Bolloju

    thanks

    22nd October 2011 10:32:00 Reply

  • Jessica Peters

    Awesome, thank you! That was really easy.

    23rd October 2011 03:42:00 Reply

  • Only LTS from now on

    How awful! That’s no Linux for Human Beings at all! >:|

    23rd October 2011 08:50:00 Reply

  • Paul Adams

    Thanks so much, that’s been annoying the hell out of me since I upgraded!

    24th October 2011 08:31:00 Reply

  • Shiba

    Seems to be corrected in proposed.

    26th October 2011 02:53:00 Reply

  • Dorin

    I use the final release of Oneiric. When I open that document, there is no line with NoDisplay. So I just had to insert it at the end of the document: “NoDisplay=false” (without the quote), and then only I found it in startup applications and disabled it. Thank you for the idea.

    27th October 2011 04:54:00 Reply

  • Guest123456

    Great tip!  Thank you very much!

    12th November 2011 03:56:00 Reply

  • Some Name

    I just don’t get it. How can free software developers make all these bad decisions. It should really be more easy to turn off this annoying startup sound.
    Reminds me of the other bad decision gnome made recently: changing the shutdown option to hibernate.
    But on the other hand I have to admit that I really like the rest of the direction gnome is heading with gnome shell.

    23rd February 2012 02:49:00 Reply

  • Md. Rezaur Rahman

    loads of thanks.

    17th April 2012 02:03:00 Reply

  • Sskraep

    Linux user since many years, and I guess I fall into the “power user” category by other people’s norms. I cannot understand what went through these developers’ minds when they created this whole new “paradigm” that “users will soon embrace”.

    Think how many hours have gone into all this. Think of how they could have been better spent, not least in the name of free software.

    Many years of telling people that Linux is not especially difficult to learn. Ubuntu is trying hard to flush that down the drain. F****** “gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.sound event-sounds false”, this is just a joke, coming from me who usually lives exclusively in the terminal.

    Thank you for this page. It is insane that such a guide is needed.

    9th May 2012 11:10:00 Reply

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