This feature is being requested repeatedly, in different forums. The
issue is certainly not urgent  or bad enough to merit attention from
developers, but it _IS_ annoying.

https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gdm/+bug/437429
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/alsa-utils/+bug/45739
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gdm/+bug/114160
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=438707
https://blueprints.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+spec/mute-sound-on-login

I'm posting a comment to this one because it seems to be the one who is
getting more attention. But it seems like there are different
interpretations for the 'silent boot' issue: i) a problem with GDM (how
to set up a silent login); ii) a more general issue with Ubuntu (make it
respond to the 'mute button' present in laptops).

Ubuntu will  keep its annoying status for the foreseeable future if this
is not addressed.

Almost all laptops sold nowadays have mute buttons. All laptop owners
sooner or later will come across that moment when you wish your laptop
would respond to the mute button. When reading in a silent library, in
class, when listening to someone else's presentation, or at 4 am in the
morning when the rest of the house is fast asleep.

Read the other bug reports on this issue. Windows allows you to mute the
laptop during the boot/startup process. And so does the Mac OS on their
laptops.

In my case (Dell XPS M1210, Ubuntu 10), the mute button works late
during the boot process. The machine starts responding to it halfway
after starting the login process in gdm ... with unpredictable results
(sometimes during the greeting sound from my gnome session, sometimes
after that).

I don't care whether the mute button in my laptop actually triggers a
gdm conf change, or if it does its magic at a lower level (sound
system). I just want the damn laptop to be quiet!

The proposed solution of having a GUI to configure this is useless in
many situations, because you often realize too late that you'd like a
silent startup (shut down the laptop last night without considering
where your next boot will be).

Different but reports make attempts at identifying the culprit (gdm,
alsa) and in setting some aims and deliverables. The configuration
tweaks one can make in gdm are OK for desktops, but although they may
have the same final result (no sound on login) they do not address the
other main issue with laptops:  making Ubuntu respond to the mute
button.

We need to raise the status of this issue. This particular bug report is
about GDM, maybe we have to take this somewhere else? pulseaudio? the
kernel? I'm pretty ignorant about these myself, so please bare with me,
but I think this issue can't go on like this ... Windows has been
responding to the mute button in laptops since Windows 95!


** Bug watch added: GNOME Bug Tracker #438707
   https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=438707

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/437429

Title:
  No GUI to configure/disable login sound

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