John,

If the faculty/staff machines are all part of an Active Directory domain, you 
can use Single-Sign-On. This uses the user's Kerberos login credentials and 
gives "no-click" login to Clean Access if the machine passes all checks.

You can set a timeout for the login success screen (We use 3 seconds) at

Device Management-> Clean Access -> General Setup -> Agent Login

Choose the User Role & Operating system, as needed.

Check the "Automatically close login success screen after [Blank] secs" and 
fill in the blank as desired.

Click update.

Best Regards,

Bruce Osborne
Liberty University

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
Behalf Of Williams, John
Sent: Friday, August 22, 2008 10:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [CLEANACCESS] Streamlining Client Login

As we continue to roll out CCA to our faculty/staff this year we here 
suggestions about streamlining the login process. A professor pointed out that 
the login process for Clean Access is several steps where the Cisco VPN is 
quite a bit less obtrusive (from off campus)

Here were some thoughts that this professor had. If there are already existing 
solutions for this please let me know. Otherwise maybe these can be 
incorporated into future releases of the client.


1)      When you first turn on your computer and the Clean Access Agent prompts 
for your username and password can you make this automatically populated so you 
just need to click next? I know clicking Remember Me will make the 
username/password persist until you power off your computer. (I know SSO would 
possibly be a solution here but I heard this can actually slow down the login 
process. True statement?) What about focusing context to the password field?

2)      "Successfully logged into the Network" is this a valuable screen to 
have. The Prof would prefer not to have to click OK and make the screen go 
away. Would rather it just 'disappear' like the Cisco VPN once it has done it's 
job.

Profs e-mail:
My only complaint is having to hit "OK" when it's all done.  If this is 
something I'm going to have to do every day when starting up the computer, at 
least the software could minimize the annoyance.  Three separate screens for 
this routine procedure is too much.

As an example of a "good" interface, I'd point to the Cisco VPN login.  It 
stores my login ID, and puts the cursor in the password box.  As soon as I type 
that and hit enter, it closes all windows and goes to work.


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