![]() To be able to print you'll need to setup each printer individually on your system. To turn CUPS off, which you don't really need by the way, you can follow the same dance of turning the service off and then disabling it from starting up. part of zeroconf (plug-n-play), turn it offįor the remaining 3 you can do the same things we did for Samba to turn them off as well.So now Samba's off we're left with the following: It allows you to check which services you want to run and in which runlevel they should be started/stopped: $ sudo apt-get install sysv-rc-conf ![]() To make them stay off I've been using this tool, sysv-rc-conf, to manage services from a console, it works better than most. For Samba you can use the service command: $ sudo service nmbd stop Turning services off can be confusing with all the flux that's been going on with upstart, /etc/rc.d, business so it might be difficult to figure out which service is under which technology. To check that they're running you can use the following command, status: $ status nmbd It's questionable that you'd really need that running on a laptop whether on localhost or your IP facing your network. You can probably right off the bat disable Samba, it accounts for 2 of the above services, nmbd and smbd.
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