This is one of the most stupid default behaviors I have encountered.
Out of the several colleagues and family members who use linux (it is
used quite a bit in a university environment), they are ALL (down to the
last one) very annoyed at this behavior.  The problem is that you have
your laptop open, and "Becca" from your calculus class comes in to your
office and opens her Macbook, and my laptop adds a printer.  Then "Chad"
(he's not even in your class) just opens their Macbook in the hallway,
and you gain a new printer again.  After a couple of months, it is a
couple of hundred added printers, though they are all grayed out in the
list when trying to print.  Even though Chad will never visit the
department again, his macbook is in my printer list forever. Just
picking one of the actual working printers becomes difficult since it
involves scrolling through a long list of gray printers to find the one
nongray one in the middle.  Deleting them is actually quite annoying to
do through the GUI and it is not at all obvious.

I got rid of the browsing feature on my laptop.  But not all of my
linux-using colleagues are very technically savvy.  They are using linux
because that's what mathematicians often use, as it has all the software
we need.  But this is a "feature" that made using linux harder, not
easier, for them.  It doesn't actually discover the actual department
printers at all, you still have to set those up manually.

And I actually think the browsing feature could be useful, but it can't
permanently add random configuration just because it appeared on the
network at some point.  That is not a feature, that is a bug.  Plus it
is not "browsing" that would mean it is temporary, what it is doing is
adding permanent configuration.  So the naming is misleading at best.
Browsing means that you are looking through the currently available
printers.  What it is doing is "Harvesting".

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Desktop
Packages, which is subscribed to cups-filters in Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1753509

Title:
  avahi-daemon adds/installs every printer on network

Status in cups-filters package in Ubuntu:
  Expired

Bug description:
  When connected to a network, avahi-daemon adds & installs all printer
  on a network without being prompted.  This is not desired behaviour.
  Discovery of the printers is good, but not automatic installation &
  addition.

  ProblemType: Bug
  DistroRelease: Ubuntu 16.04
  Package: avahi-daemon 0.6.32~rc+dfsg-1ubuntu2
  ProcVersionSignature: Ubuntu 4.13.0-36.40~16.04.1-generic 4.13.13
  Uname: Linux 4.13.0-36-generic x86_64
  ApportVersion: 2.20.1-0ubuntu2.15
  Architecture: amd64
  CurrentDesktop: Unity
  Date: Mon Mar  5 09:29:05 2018
  InstallationDate: Installed on 2017-09-29 (157 days ago)
  InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 16.04.3 LTS "Xenial Xerus" - Release amd64 
(20170801)
  ProcEnviron:
   LANGUAGE=en_US
   PATH=(custom, no user)
   XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=<set>
   LANG=en_US.UTF-8
   SHELL=/bin/bash
  SourcePackage: avahi
  UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install)

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/cups-filters/+bug/1753509/+subscriptions

-- 
Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~desktop-packages
Post to     : desktop-packages@lists.launchpad.net
Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~desktop-packages
More help   : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp

Reply via email to