A lock screen is a computer user interface element used by various operating systems. They regulate immediate access to a device by requiring the user to perform a certain action in order to receive access, such as entering a password, using a certain button combination, or performing a certain gesture using a device's touchscreen. There are various authentication methods to get past the lock screen, with the most popular and common ones being personal identification numbers (PINs), the Android pattern lock, and biometrics (e.g. Touch ID and facial recognition).[1]

Depending on the operating system and device type, a lock screen can range from a simple login screen, to an overview screen with the current date and time, weather, recent notifications, playback controls for media being played in the background (typically music), shortcuts to applications (such as the camera), and optionally, the contact information of the device's owner (which can be used in the event that the device is lost or stolen, or during a medical emergency).[2][3][4]


Download The App Lock Screen


DOWNLOAD šŸ”„ https://geags.com/2y3gS2 šŸ”„



Mobile operating system that run on smartphones and tablets typically use a gesture based lock-screen. Phones manufactured by Neonode were unlocked by swiping to the right on its touchscreen. Apple's iOS, used by the iPhone and iPad lines, utilized a similar unlock mechanism until iOS 10, with an on-screen slider slid to the right. Beginning on iOS 5, sliding in the other direction sends the user directly to the camera app. On iOS 7, the slider widget was removed as part of a larger overhaul of the iOS interface, and users could now swipe from any point on the screen. The lock screen also displays a clock, notifications, and provides audio playback controls.[5][6] iOS 10 made major changes to the lock screen, replacing the sliding gesture with pressing the Home button. Swiping is still used to access the camera, as well as an additional page to the left with widgets.[7][8] As the iPhone X and iPad Pro do not have physical home buttons, the user must swipe upwards from the bottom of the screen instead.[9][10]

At first, Android did not use a gesture-based lock screen, electing to require the user to press the phone's Menu button. On Android 2.0, a new gesture-based lock screen was introduced, displaying two icons: one for unlocking the phone, and one for setting the volume mode, activated by dragging the relevant icon to the center of the screen on a curve (similarly to a rotary dial). On Android 2.1, the rotary dial was replaced by two tabs on either end of the screen.[11] Android 3.0 introduced a new design: a ball with a padlock icon is dragged to the outside of a circular area.[12] On 4.0, the option to unlock straight to the camera is provided, while 4.1 adds the ability to unlock into a Google Search screen by dragging up.[13][14] Android 4.2 makes additional changes to the lock screen, allowing users to add widgets to pages accessible on the lock screen by swiping from the left edge of the screen. The camera is accessed in a similar manner by swiping from the right edge of the screen.[14] Android also allows devices to be locked using either a password, passcode, a pattern on a grid of 9 circles, fingerprint sensing, or facial recognition.[11]

Android distributions by other manufacturers typically use different lock screen designs than what stock Android utilizes; some versions of HTC's Sense used a metallic ring dragged from the bottom of the screen to unlock the phone, and also allows users to launch apps by dragging their respective shortcut icon into the ring instead.[15] On Samsung devices, the lock screen involves dragging in any direction from any location on the screen (TouchWiz Nature devices, such as the Galaxy S III and S4, are also accompanied by a visual effect, such as a pond ripple or lens flare); similarly to HTC's lock screen, app shortcuts can be dragged up from the bottom of the screen to unlock directly into them.[16][17]

Particularly on Android, custom lock screen software can be designed to replace the default lock screen with one that displays advertising or otherwise sponsored content.[24][25] Amazon's Android-based Kindle Fire tablets display notifications of "special offers" on its lock screen, unless users purchase a more expensive SKU of the device which disables this feature.[26] In 2016, Amazon began to market discounted smartphones exclusive to Amazon Prime subscribers that are subsidized by "special offers" and pre-loaded Amazon apps.[27] In November 2017, Google Play Store prohibited apps from displaying advertisements on the lock screen unless the app is specifically designed to replace the lock screen, citing issues with adware embedded in unrelated apps.[28] The Indian company Glance produces a lock screen replacement that displays a content feed on the lock screen, which is monetized via advertising.[25]

Apple holds several patents related to the sliding lock screen used by its iOS devices: it was granted U.S. Patent 7,657,849 in 2010, and U.S. Patent 8,046,721 in 2011, describing a system that involves continuously dragging an image to a certain point to unlock the device.[29] As part of ongoing patent wars between numerous companies surrounding patents related to mobile devices, Apple asserted these patents in several patent infringement lawsuits outside the United States with competing vendors.[30]

You can customize your lock screen. Try changing the background to a favorite photo or slide show. You can also choose quick status notifications to show you upcoming calendar events, social network updates, or other app and system notifications.

If you chose Windows spotlight for your lock screen, you can test if it's working correctly. Press Windows logo key + L to lock your device. The Windows spotlight image should appear on the lock screen.

If you don't see the Windows spotlight image when you're signing in, select StartĀ  > Settings > Personalization > Lock screen. Check that the toggle for Show lock screen background picture on the sign-in screen is turned on.

If you chose Windows spotlight for your lock screen, you can test if it's working correctly. Press Windows logo key + L to lock your device. The Windows spotlight image should appear on the lock screen.

If you don't see the Windows spotlight image when you're signing in, select StartĀ  > SettingsĀ  > PersonalizationĀ  > Lock screen . Then make sure Show lock screen background picture on the sign-in screen is turned on.

Aside from using apple configurator to place the device name on the lock screen, is there a way to do it remotely? I've found that I can add a Lock Screen Message through configuration profiles, but it looks like it would be the same message on all iPads. I'm trying to find a way to send a remote command either via Configuration Profile or some other method to get the device name to display on the lock screen. Anyone know if that's possible, and how?

It does not happen often but when it does we put the device into lock mode "manually" as an action, then create a smart group (clone a template) of device serial number and last check in 1 day and check to email.

@Gd517 - if you set the app location setting to "always", does that resolve the issue and the boarding pass shows on the lock screen? I believe I have mine set to "while using the app" also, so this is something I will have to test out on my next flight.

I have been using the app on my samsung phone and now moved to iOS device, iPhone X. It was working pretty fine with my old samsung phone but now it is not showing the boarding pass on the lock screen of my new iPhone X. Can somebody please help me with it, skywestonline is working but south west is not working why?

I would like to have a display manager (or at least something that acts like one) in my wayland setup, like I did with LightDM in my xorg setup. I've installed greetd with the gtkgreet greeter, but I'm not sure how it is supposed to be used. More specifically, I'm not sure how to lock my computer so that it'll go back to the greeter for login.

Currently when my system wakes up from sleep, it just shows the desktop. I saw that many people use swaylock, but swaylock has a login screen of its own, instead of the greeter that I want to use. So is it possible to have my system wake up to the greetd greeter?

Is there a setting we can adjust in managing our ChromeOS devices to turn the feature "show lock screen when waking from sleep"? Currently users can turn this setting on/off themselves , but we rather want to enforce this setting on. Can't find any such settings in the admin console.

I find this feature problematic. When listening to a book I frequently find myself accidentally triggering that timeline on the Android lock screen by accident and then have to search for where I actually left off. This can happen in my pocket, for instance.

I just set up my new Pixel 4 yesterday, and one thing I notice is that the Spotify widget with playback controls no longer appears on the lock screen. Now, the Pixel 4 does have the ability to use gestures (i.e. wave your hand) to skip forward or back while locked, but as far as I can tell, there is no way to pause playback from the lock screen. I have to pick up the phone and unlock it to pause/play on the app, and that's annoying.

Okay after some more research I found another option. You can keep your face unlock on, but if you deactivate the "Skip Lock Screen" option (under Settings > Security > Face unlock), you can get that control widget back. As well as your other full notifications. Basically with that setting turned off when your face unlocks the phone, instead of going straight to your last used app/screen, it brings up the old standard lock screen (which has the Spotify widget, notifications that you can interact with, notification content, etc.). You then just have to swipe up from there to get to fully unlocked. One extra step. ff782bc1db

ebook reader app for windows 7 free download

osmoza

deep freeze 8.53 download

can i download dream league soccer 2020

download office 2023