The whole point is to make this as easy for someone coming over to Windows as possible, and if every time someone sits down at a computer, I have to open a terminal and manually mount the share, or manually edit the fstab for the new user sitting there, it's useless. They don't want to have to open the mount manager and mount 18 different shares they need free access to. They want to be able to browse the "Network Servers" manager, just as if they would "Network Neighborhood" on Windows. And they don't mind the current "Network Servers" browser, it works almost perfectly, they are very comfortable with it, with the exception of certain files not being able to be opened without copying to the HD first. On Fri, 2004-02-27 at 12:28, Christoph Wickert wrote: > Am Fr, den 27.02.2004 schrieb Adam Voigt um 17:56: > > Well yes I could, but again, thats not at all a fluid solution, it's a > > dry-powder solution =). It requires that sudo be setup for each user > > account to be able to run mount with root privileges, plus I have to > > store my network password in the script. > > You are wrong. It only requires "user" in the corresponding line in > /etc/fstab, then users are allowed to (un)mount the partitions. > > Christoph -- Adam Voigt adam@xxxxxxxxxxxxx