I've realised what I do that produces a different result with the Chromium keyring issue. I elect to 'Continue' without entering a password, then confirm that action. On subsequent boots I no longer get the keyring prompt. I realise that this could be considered a security risk, but I guess most use...
Jerry3904 wrote: ↑Thu Dec 28, 2023 5:48 pm
So I should leave the Tips as it is, I guess, at least for now. @chrispop99 Were you testing that on the Pi 5 or the Pi 4?
In the Wiki>rpi-tips, the Miscellaneous section mentions that if using auto-login, Chrome will ask for a password the first time after every session start, but it only does that now once after a new install. Can that Wiki entry be corrected to reflect the change?
There is one further option, that is possibly the riskiest way, and that is to install a .deb file that you have downloaded. If that is that only way to get something you need, it can work out OK if you are cautious. Research if the version you are downloading matches the Debian base of the MX Linux...
The notification that 'Your browser is being maintained by your organization' doesn't mean you don't have the latest version. It just means that the updates come from the MX Linux repositories, rather than Mozilla's. You can use 'Help>About Firefox' from the menu to see you have the latest version -...