Yes we have been able to have two distinct images for the wallpapers for LockScreen and Desktop before Sonoma. I've had an image for Lock Screen (sign in screen) wallpaper and a different image for desktop wallpaper. We seem to have lost that ability with Sonoma - a great loss. Many of us use a company logo or image for the lock screen and a personal image for the desktop.

the Lock Screen wallpaper will match the desktop wallpaper of the account you are logged in to when you lock your screen. the login screen is a different matter. but you use the Lock Screen system preferences to change the login window.


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if you are the sole user (not even a guest account) AND file vault is turned off you can go to System Settings, in the Lock Screen tab, and set "Login window shows" to "List of users". then your login screen matches your desktop background.

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 six virtual desktops and want to change a desktop wallpaper for all of them at once. There is no such option when using System Preferences, so I have to change a wallpaper only for one desktop and repeat this six times.

If, like me, you have your additional desktops arranged just how you like them, then the thought of deleting and recreating them just to change the wallpaper would be like recommending that I demolish my house so that I can repaint the walls. I'm not going to do that.

Then, open Mission Control (on my machine, I launch Mission Control with the "Swipe up with three fingers" gesture) and drag & drop the Desktop & Screen Saver window onto the next desktop. The window will update to reflect the new desktop in focus and I can switch that desktop's image to whatever I want it to be. Repeat for as many desktops as you have. (If you have multiple monitors, then each monitor will have it's own Desktop window, named something like "Secondary Desktop".)

I have always used pywal on all of my Linux machines, and I just wanted to see if it would also work on MacOS, and indeed it does. Not only will it change the desktop image for all desktops with a single command, but it also has the ability to set your Terminal colors to a theme to match your desktop background (as long as you are using iTerm2 and not Terminal.app).

To get a theme, expand one of the categories below, select a link for the theme, and then select Open. This saves the theme to your PC and puts it on your desktop. See Personalize your PC to learn more.

A theme is a combination of desktop background pictures, window colors, and sounds. To get a theme, expand one of the categories below, select a link for the theme, and then select Open. This saves the theme to your PC and puts it on your desktop. See Personalize your PC to learn more.

I'm using Remmina for connecting to a Windows 7 machine over RDP. One problem is that instead of the wallpaper of remote desktop it displays a black backround. In the RDP preferences the "Wallpaper" flag is set for all quality types of connections (from 'poor' to 'best' ) and wallpaper is not displayed with any connection type. ( Also I tried to set various color types - high color, true color, etc.) What can cause the problem? On Debian it worked OK.

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.

I created an image for a desktop wallpaper and set the image directly in Windows (not from a browser). However, the image file I made is no longer on my computer, but the wallpaper is still there. How can I retrieve this wallpaper? It has to load from somewhere.

I've owned my HP Stream 13 for more than a year now, but since I've opened it from the box and and attempted to change my desktop wallpaper from the defaults, it has only been just plain, solid black. All I want to do is put a wallpaper on that I might enjoy that isn't just this dull plain background or one of the ones that came prepackaged with the netbook.

If you're unsure which to use, try the Save For Web option in Photoshop (if that's the program you're using). Below is a comparison of my current wallpaper, JPG vs PNG. You can see that, for this wallpaper, JPG offers much smaller file size (look at the bottom left corner) and there is very little quality loss

Important: If you use your Chromebook at work or school, your administrator might not let you change your wallpaper. If you can't change your wallpaper, contact your administrator for more help.

You may have read on OMG! Ubuntu! that the Fossa mascot was recently revealed The merge proposals that add the new mascot and wallpapers to Ubuntu Focal Fossa, which will become 20.04 LTS in April, have been submitted

Fresh from the Canonical design team is a collection of Focal Fossa wallpapers in a variety of resolutions, coloured and greyscale, plus mascot SVGs. I look forward to seeing what the Ubuntu flavour teams and community are able to create using these art assets

Thanks for your attention. But this method is for STATIC wallpaper not for SLDESHOW. 

I want to select a source folder of many wallpaper and the desktop wallpaper changes between those wallpaper every 10 minutes

Back on March 30th, I wrote about the entirety of Shrek being available to download via Steam for Wallpaper Engine. It was removed within twelve hours and I feel no remorse. But while moderators can remove files from the Steam Workshop, they can't remove them from your PC, and I've kept Shrek as my desktop wallpaper for nearly three months.

It's worth reiterating some of the finer details, here. What I've had lurking upon my desktop is a low quality, 92MB video of the entirety of Shrek. It's highly compressed but, importantly, still watchable. It plays whenever my desktop is visible on my monitor or whenever I interact with the start menu, and it is paused the rest of the time. Aside from that, I have no way of controlling the video.

Alas, all things must end. I don't know if, once I've turned it off, I'll ever be able to re-activate Shrek within Wallpaper Engine. I doubt I'd want to, even if having Shrek as my desktop is preferable to the anime crimes that form the rest of Wallpaper Engine's Steam Workshop. But I've now watched an ogre bathe in mud to the Smash Mouth song over 50 times and I still don't hate it, and that's worth knowing.

Adobe Express includes a huge selection of design options that can be added to your wallpaper in a second. Feel free to experiment with all the different features. If you want to add stylized text, you can do so with a couple of clicks. Swap out images, add filters, or make a collage. Change everything from the layout to the size of your creation. If you want to brand your wallpaper, upload branded company visuals including your logo.

Bing Wallpaper includes a collection of beautiful images from around the world that have been featured on the Bing homepage. Not only will you see a new image on your desktop each day, but you can also browse images and learn where they're from.

All the photos are in their original 16:10, in the 5k (if there's such a resolution) 5120 x 3200 as I wanted users to be able to position the desktops as they see fit. Also adding Light / Dark desktops as I have time. 0852c4b9a8

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