Today, every time I reset or turn off and back on the computer, the secondary desktop wallpaper reverts back to a desktop I had prior (right after OS instal a few days ago). The 1st display wallpaper stays. The STRANGE thing is, when I am logging in after reset or turn on, the wallpaper is correct ! Then once I finish log in, it zaps to the older wallpaper.

Check out this page: Change the desktop picture (background) on your Mac. Make sure everything is set up correctly. Notice that in Mojave "you can also choose from Dynamic Desktop images, which automatically change throughout the day based on the time of day in your location."


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I updated to 10.8 and for some reason my desktop wallpaper will default to the Galaxy wallpaper whenever I restart or shutdown. I will change the wallpaper to something else, restart or shutdown and the Galaxy wallpaper will be back. I re-installed mountain lion and it has not resolved the issue. Anybosy experiencing the same issues?

MAC OS X Lion / Mountain Lion does not save your wallpaper on the native HDD, rather tries to load the wallpaper from the original HDD, i guess only the path to the wallpaper is saved in the OS X settings.

I have no such file in Library:Preferences either. I'm running Mountain Lion and my desktop keeps reverting to an old image I was using before upgrading from Lion. I keep finding the same answers to this question, but none of them seem to work for me.

Nope. I use wallpapers randomly selected from my iPhoto albums. I have 4 workspaces. Spaces 2, 3 and 4 have the wallpaper correctly applied. The main workspace still reverts back to the default galaxy wallpaper. I would be glad to help out with any diagnostics and troubleshooting info if you want to request it.

Hello. I have an Asus ROG Zephyrus Gaming Notebook, and I want to change my desktop's wallpaper. When I go into my Settings >Personalization >Background and click on the image I want, it changes back to my current wallpaper within a few seconds. I've tried restarting my laptop to see if that fixed the issue, but it didn't.

The image I want to use was a default image from when I got my computer last month. It's still saved under recent images, but I haven't found a way to save that wallpaper to my device, either. If anyone can help me out, I'd greatly appreciate it! Thanks in advance!

I recently purchased a new 40 inch, 4k monitor which has been great. However, in my hunt to find high resolution, high quality desktop wallpapers for my new desktop size, I have found that I'm unable to apply any PNG wallpaper larger than 24.9MB (or effectively 25MB). It seems to be a hard limit for PNGs (JPEG doesn't seem to have the same problem) and whenever I try to set a wallpaper that's larger than that, it thinks for a second or two and then automatically sets the background to a solid color.

So my question boils down to this:Is there a way to remove this file size limit for desktop wallpapers in Windows 10 through a registry hack or setting? Or is this something that's hard-coded into the OS?

I'm looking around for any MTG artwork that is around 1920 x 1080p to be used as my desktop background. It's hard to find any besides the MTG website but I would like to look for some of my favorite cards. My favorite card is [[Necropotence]] but that's pretty niche and I can't really find anything for it.

I am configuring Group Policy in Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise to apply Desktop Wallpaper to Users and Computer in OU called HR. I shared the folder over the network using share and storage management. I configured the desktop wallpaper settings in the following order:

Inheritance - Group Policy modelling (above) will show this. It could be that you have a policy higher up the chain which stops the changing of wallpapers or sets a different wallpaper.

Once the background.xml file has been generated, right-click on the desktop, select Change Background Image, click Add..., then navigate to the directory containing the XML file. Just above the "Open" button change the selector from "Image" to "All files", then select the background.xml file and click on the "Open" button. The file can be renamed to be more descriptive, such as my_family.xml, landscapes-3.xml, etc., allowing one to have multiple slide show playlists.

Ok here is how I did it, which is probably not the best way to do it but it worked and I didn't have to install anything to do it. Back in 11.10 I found the below python script (slideshow.py) which generates a slideshow.xml file (run from directory with the images in it). This is still the file needed in 12.04 but you also need another XML file. Put the XML file generated by slideshow.py script in /usr/share/backgrounds/contest and chown it to root. Once that is done you'll need to run the second python script (wallpapers.py) which was adapted from the first. Put the file generated from wallpapers.py in /usr/share/gnome-background-properties and again chown it to root. At that point you should be able to go into "System Settings" -> Appearance and pick your slideshow or any of the pics in it.

After seeing this request, I was curious about a solution and found something to be able to get your wallpaper image to be a part of the default wallpaper selection when going into System Settings >> Appearances. Follow the steps below in a terminal:

In this example, I made changes to the , , , and information to match what I needed for the wallpaper I wanted. Now I see the wallpaper as a default selection in the wallpaper section of the System Settings -> Appearance GUI:

In case you use gnome-shell (version > 3.12, default in Ubuntu 17.10 and later), use this nice extension. This extension fetches a random wallpaper from an online source and sets it as desktop background. The desktop background can be updated periodically or manually.

Visit the gnome-extension homepage and switch the slide on. Afterwards you can configure the extension. To do so open gnome-tweaks, go to the Extension tab and click on the Configure icon of the random-wallpaper.

I'm doing randomized slideshows of a set of many thousands of images with it, in a deep directory structure. When running in window mode, rather than desktop background, I can add comments to them easily when I see one I like, and go into sequential mode to look for similar ones.

I have a folder with pictures which I used as wallpapers for years on my debian 10.8 notebook. I'm using XFCE 4.12.5. Since some month I only have a gray background. The only thing I have changed, as far as I remember, was connecting a second display to the notebook. Having no wallpaper on XFCE has been asked at Stackexchange several times, but none of the solutions worked for me. Going to the desktop settings, trying to set a pic as wallpaper via Thunar, "apt install --reinstall xfdesktop4", ... nothing workend.

With a right click on the desktop, choose 'Desktop Settings...' and check which folder is selected.

'desktop-base' I think is the default, set it there if it's not. The pics from an alternate location can be linked into that directory by root.

You can select a different directory, but it seems updates can alter things. I'm not clear in my memory, but I think I've seen an issue like this in the past. I started linking, or simply moving any pic to desktop-base and keep it simple. Utilities that can change desktop image seem to be numerous and problematic over many upgrades, I never narrowed down the issue...

Some other questions:

- which version of xfdesktop are you running ("xfdesktop -V")?

- is this a connection to a local machine or are you remoting in to another computer?

- how are you starting Xfce? Display manager (if so, which one?) or if via init, then can you post your ~/.xnitrc?

You can modify both files to your choosing, but I prefer to keep things simple and only make a change to the variable wallpaperurl in the shell script. For future updates of wallpaper images, only modifying wallpaperurl URL to a new image is required to deploy the new wallpaper.

You can prevent users from changing the configured Wallpaper image by using a Device Restriction Configuration Profile, and configuring the Block modification of wallpaper setting to Yes

How many times have you walked up to a system in your office and neededto click through several diagnostic windows to remind yourself ofimportant aspects of its configuration, such as its name, IP address, oroperating system version? If you manage multiple computers you probablyneed BGInfo. It automatically displays relevant information about aWindows computer on the desktop's background, such as the computer name,IP address, service pack version, and more. You can edit any field aswell as the font and background colors, and can place it in your startupfolder so that it runs every boot, or even configure it to display asthe background for the logon screen.

When you run BGInfo it shows you the appearance and content of itsdefault desktop background. If left untouched it will automaticallyapply these settings and exit after its 10 second count-down timerexpires.

Fields: Selects what information appears on the desktop, and theorder in which it is displayed. For networking fields (NIC, IP, MAC,etc.) a separate entry is created for each network card on the system.Use the Custom button to add special information you define yourself.

Background: Selects the color and/or wallpaper to use for thebackground. If you select the Copy existing settings option thenBGInfo will use whatever information is currently selected by thelogged on user. This option allows end users to personalize theirdesktop while still displaying the BGInfo information.

Desktops: Selects which desktops are updated when the configurationis applied. By default only the User Desktop wallpaper is changed.Enabling the Logon Desktop for Console users option specifies thatthe wallpaper should be displayed on the logon desktop that is presentedbefore anyone has logged onto the system. On Windows 95/98/ME systemsthe same desktop is used for users and the login screen, so this optionhas no effect. Enabling the Logon Desktop for Terminal Servicesusers option specifies that the wallpaper should be displayed on theTerminal Services login screen. This option is useful only on serversrunning Terminal Services. 2351a5e196

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