Hi [member=7644]DeepThought[/member]
Thanks for the link! I've already tried editing those files with no luck. But I'll try again, maybe I missed something

It seems the LL team took a great effort making this distro foolproof, and they did quite a good job. I don't think it's possible to do what I want, at least not without having to change/edit a lot of stuff since everything has been tailored in a way one can't simply change without breaking the system. While editing and comparing lightdm configuration files with those of the other VMs I noticed they have been edited to meet LL dev team criteria and needs, not that I'm complaining nor I'm saying that's a bad thing, I'm simply stating the fact that it is very difficult to customize some aspects the same way you would do in many other distros out there, and again, that's not a bad thing, it simply is the way it is.
Hi [member=7109]Moltke[/member] Looking at that link more closely it does seem to be out of date. At the top there is a change noted:
Quote:Later versions of lightdm (15.10 onwards) have replaced the obsolete [SeatDefaults] with [Seat:*]
Might need a search for more up to date info

[member=7644]DeepThought[/member] the Arch wiki is a great source of information, even if you don't use Arch you can benefit from reading it

here's the link on lightdm from there
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/LightDM I read it trying to figure out how to do what I want to in LL.
Don't take entries out. Just comment them out, that way you can change them back. Use two users, and an .rc file giving each it's own default desktop. See links. Not all desktops will load from lightdm, but you can alternatively configure without lightdm using startx and login commands. It's worth remembering that you can build just about anything with Debian and/or Arch, but both Ubuntu and LL are highly customized and don't always respond well to non-native software.
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Softwar...iguration/
https://wiki.debian.org/LightDM
TC
Quote:Ubuntu and LL are highly customized and don't always respond well to non-native software
Oh I can tell [member=5916]trinidad[/member] lol
What I did to work around this was copy the xfce .desktop file, save it, go back to the xsession folder, delete the xfce .desktop file, restart the VM so I could login to awesome. I backed up everything from that VM regarding lightdm and xfce, so if things go west I could restore the config easily

But I honestly think is too much work and even if you manage to do it there's the risk of ending up with a nonresponsive-unusable system, so I think we're better off leaving LL have it its way. 8)