You can use the Custom Logon feature to suppress Windows UI elements that relate to the Welcome screen and shutdown screen. For example, you can suppress all elements of the Welcome screen UI and provide a custom logon UI. You can also suppress the Blocked Shutdown Resolver (BSDR) screen and automatically end applications while the OS waits for applications to close before a shutdown.

Custom Logon settings don't modify the credential behavior of Winlogon, so you can use any credential provider that is compatible with Windows 10 to provide a custom sign-in experience for your device. For more information about creating a custom logon experience, see Winlogon and Credential Providers.


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You can configure the Unattend settings in the Microsoft-Windows-Embedded-EmbeddedLogon component to add custom logon features to your image during the design or imaging phase. You can manually create an Unattend answer file or use Windows System Image Manager (Windows SIM) to add the appropriate settings to your answer file. For more information about the custom logon settings and XML examples, see the settings in Microsoft-Windows-Embedded-EmbeddedLogon.

The following table shows the possible values. To disable multiple Logon screen UI elements together, you can select the Decimal base when modifying the BrandingNeutral value, and combine actions by adding the decimal values of the desired actions and inputting the sum as the value of BrandingNeutral. For example, to disable the Power button and the Language button, select the decimal option for the base, then add the decimal values of each, in this case 2 and 4 respectively, and input the total (6) as the value for BrandingNeutral.

In the following image of the [ctrl + alt + del] screen, you can see the Switch user button highlighted by a light green outline, the Language button highlighted by an orange outline, the Ease of Access button highlighted by a red outline, and the power button highlighted by a yellow outline. If you disable these buttons, they're hidden from the UI.

Long overdue but I am using the latest optimization tool with 1803, The only thing that is an issue at this point is we have about a 45 second logon which is understandable with our GPO, UEM, Machine assigned appstacks but after I am seeing an an additional 30 - 40 second delay with a brief popup in the middle for configuring windows media player. Has anyone seen this before and figured out what it is doing during this time frame. I would rather they continue to see the windows blue screen then this black screen. Using the latest b1160 optimization tool.

Example logon, Clocked at 83 seconds total, 45 seconds of windows screens then 38 seconds of black screen with a small prompt that says something then configuring media player for no more then a second in the middle.

That was correct, updated that key in the optimization tool to update to 30 and it adds about 30 seconds of welcome to the logon instead of black screen. Looks like without the key it is about 60 - 70 seconds. Next step will be to see how much we can reduce that but this will allow us to push our progress to prod this month. Thanks again

Would Windows hello be the only comparable thing within Azure? Is there a way using a Native Windows 365 license to get you to have to enter a OTP code along with your windows machine password? Or even just accept an MS authenticator prompt?

Elevate your device by showcasing beautiful images from around the globe with Windows spotlight, or your favorite memories with a custom photo or a dynamic slide show as your lock screen background.

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.

Select the list for Lock screen status and select an app that can show detailed status on the lock screen. You can also select None if you don't want to see detailed status on the lock screen.

Currently, you cannot choose individual cards that appear on the lock screen for the Weather and more experience. You can choose an alternate app to show detailed status from StartĀ  > SettingsĀ  > Personalization > Lock screen, or select None if you don't want to see detailed status on the lock screen.

Weather and more on the lock screen might tailor content based on your location estimation to provide you with the most contextually relevant experience. Location estimation can come from the Windows Location service if enabled, otherwise it may fall back on using the IP address of your internet connection.

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

Select the icon under Choose one app to show detailed status on the lock screen, then select an app that can show detailed status on the lock screen. You can also select None if you don't want to see detailed status on the lock screen.

Currently, you cannot choose individual cards that appear on the lock screen for the Weather and more experience. You can choose an alternate app to show detailed status from Start > Settings > Personalization > Lock screen, or select None if you don't want to see detailed status on the lock screen.

Weather and more on the lock screen might tailor content based on your location estimation to provide you with the most contextually relevant experience. Location estimation can come from the Windows Location service if enabled, otherwise it may fall back on using the IP address of your internet connection.

Ideally, this can be done for a non-virtual installation of Windows 7 and without the use of an RDP client connection. There are numerous blog posts, how-to's, etc that include screen shots of the Windows 7 logon screen... how did they do it?

You could simply take a photo of the screen on your monitor with a camera. I know it's a bit old school to do it that way, but if you can't use the solutions others have posted (VM or RDP) it may be your best option.

Also some vulnerability scanners will try to connect with network level authentication disabled and take a screenshot of the login screen - which is useful to determine the OS edition, OS language, whether the machine is part of a domain, and (in some cases) some valid user names.

I would like to send some text to win logon screen username/password fields. I administrate a lot of computers and I would like to automate the logon by inserting login and password from a server app. A client app is running as service on the client computers. I can "Send()" text in those 2 fields with paexec (opensource psexec) but I can't determine precisly in what field i'm writing. I tried severals ControlSend() options and all of them write in the field containing the active cursor.

Thanks for your answer jdelaney. Unfortunately I don't want to use Autologon with registry. I just want to avoid writing my username/password 20 times to 20 computers in a classroom each time I need to connect to my domain.

I have also followed advice from those that state their workaround has succeeded, but not for me. Every piece of advice I have followed has taken me to a password prompt. That is why I am trying to bypass my login password to access my desktop. It appears the Windows setup will not allow me to do anything without a password. If I could get to a manual boot screen, I think I could bypass the password prompt with the correct command, but nothing I have tried so far allows that.

Nothing on the recovery screens seems to work. I have tried Command Prompt but it takes me to a password prompt. I tried Startup Settings in Advanced Options to change Windows startup behavior, but when I click on the menu options, nothing happens. I do not want to reset my PC because I have many items on my desktop I cannot afford to lose. I have also tried a Safe Boot without success.

On my Windows sign-in page a message reads, 'Something happened and your PIN isn't available. Click to set up your pin again.' When I click on the Set up my PIN tab, no screen opens. Nothing happens. I have never signed in with a PIN, but I did set one the night before this problem occurred. The first time I tried to use the PIN was when I started the PC the next morning. I know the PIN I set, but the Windows sign-in screen will not accept it.

Use Third-Party Password Recovery Tools: There are third-party password recovery tools available that can help you reset or bypass Windows logon passwords. These tools are generally not recommended unless you have no other option and understand the risks involved.

On my windows logon screen there is a message that states: 'Something happened and your PIN isn't available. Click to set up your PIN again.' When I press on the 'Set up my PIN' button, nothing happens. I go to sign in options, but apart from my PIN, which is unavailable, I can only sign in with a password, which I have forgotten. What a crazy system!!!

Windows 7 Logon Background Changer is a free open source software that lets you change the wallpaper of the Windows 7 login screen (also known as "welcome screen" or "login screen"). It does not change any system file, and the program itself does not requires admin rights to run (it will just ask you to run as admin a very simple cmd file that creates the required folder and registry key with the appropriate rights) It creates a few JPEG files based on the image you want to put as wallpaper for the Windows 7 login screen, applies the appropriate cropping and sizing and saves them using the best compression quality possible. 0852c4b9a8

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