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Windows 10 all users desktop 2 2019

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How to Change Desktop Wallpaper for All Users

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You can drag a Metro tile from the right side of the Start menu to the desktop and create a shortcut. There could be many good reasons you may want to prevent users from changing the desktop background on. In the Folder Options window, select the View tab.

It was one of the group policy settings that was causing the problem. You may find some links in the All Apps list don't have a right-click Uninstall option. Easy: Right-click on each, one at a time, and choose Unpin from Start.

Recognized Environment Variables (Windows 10)

Windows 10 promises to bring back the Windows 7 Start menu for those of us who still slavishly utilize a keyboard and mouse -- you know, the people who. Windows Technical Preview build 9860 shows a Start menu that's familiar on the left and Metro-esque on the right. While Microsoft is likely to change the Start menu substantially before the final version of Windows 10 ships in the second half of 2015, the plumbing's in and working, and it holds a lot of new possibilities. Here's a guided tour the Win10 Start menu and how to make the most of it. I also point out some of the obvious Start menu shortcomings and bugs as we step through the details. If you've played with the Win10 Start menu at all, you probably know you can drag and drop items in the pinned part, at the top of the left side. You can't drag and drop items in the lower part, though. As with Windows 7, that lower list is supposed to be your most frequently used programs, although also like in Win7, Windows manipulates the list, favoring some programs over others. Usually you can drag the item from the left side to the right and accomplish the same thing. The only way I've found to add items to the top of the left side is to drag and drop them. It's easy to drag from Explorer, the desktop, the right Metro side of the Start menu, or nearly anywhere else. In Win7, you could Pin to Start, and the chosen entry would end up in the top list. To do so, right-click on any empty part of the taskbar, choose Properties, pick the Start Menu tab, and click Customize at the bottom. There you'll see listed the items that, if checked, will always appear at the top of the Start menu. If you accidentally right-clicked and unpinned an item from the Start menu list, this is where you go to get it back. If you lament the passing of Control Panel, Music, Network, or the others, you can bring them back to the top of the Start menu with a couple of clicks. The Start Menu tab of the Taskbar Properties dialog is also where you go if you want to kill the Start menu entirely and revert to the Windows 8-style Metro Start screen. I think of that as the Windows 10 equivalent of going feral. When you click on All Apps at the bottom of the left side of the Start menu, you'll be overwhelmed by the huge number of Metro apps and possibly desktop programs that appear in a large, alphabetized list, with folder names at the bottom and all other items at the top. If you find any third-party Metro apps that is, Metro apps not originating from Microsoft on the list, it's easy to uninstall them and thus take them off the All Apps list. To do so, right-click on the All Apps item and choose Uninstall. Windows will terminate with extreme prejudice, as shown in the screenshot. You can shoot Sound Recorder that way and nobody will know the difference, but it isn't advisable to uninstall, say, Store or Windows Feedback. You may find some links in the All Apps list don't have a right-click Uninstall option. If you want to get rid of one of those, look in the folder C:UsersAppDataRoamingMicrosoftWindowsStart MenuPrograms or in the folder C:ProgramDataMicrosoftWindowsStart MenuPrograms. Shortcuts there other than Documents and Pictures, which appear for every user can be deleted with impunity: Delete the shortcut, and the associated entry disappears from All Apps. Microsoft has yet to bring full Windows 7-level support to customizing the All Apps list, but most of the meat is there and operational. In the screenshot shown here, I created a folder called AskWoody in C:ProgramDataMicrosoftWindowsStart MenuPrograms, and put four more folders inside the AskWoody folder. I then logged out and logged back in; as you can see, the folder structure is faithfully replicated in Windows 10's All Apps list, as any Win7 guru would expect. Programs, shortcuts to programs, and shortcuts to folders placed inside the homegrown folders appear on the All Apps list, and they function exactly as they do in Win7. Unfortunately, files placed inside the homegrown folders don't appear on the Win10 All Apps list -- at least, not in Build 9860. Files in that location appear in the All Programs list in Win7. My guess is we'll see the functionality restored in a later build. For those of you who have asked, I windows 10 all users desktop and tried but couldn't figure out how to stuff all of those Metro app icons into different folders. Ping me in the comments if you've figured it out. Microsoft will certainly give us tools to manage all of those All Apps entries by the time Win10 ships, I assume. In many ways, the Metro tiles on the right side of the Start menu behave much like their counterparts on the Metro Start screen we've all come to love and admire in Windows 8 and 8. You can drag them around, and they'll bump other tiles to line up in a rather strict formation: Small tiles go next to each other, new columns show up automatically, you can't create your own new columns unless the other columns are full. Any -- but not all -- of the tiles can be resized, to one of four sizes. The screenshot shows four Small, six Medium, one Wide, and one Large windows 10 all users desktop. Easy: Right-click on each, one at a time, and choose Unpin from Start. Right-click and choose Uninstall, and the app is uninstalled. Want to pin an app that appears in windows 10 all users desktop Metro tile portion of the Start menu to the left side of the Start menu. No sweat: Drag it from right to left. You can drag a Metro tile from the right side of the Start menu to the desktop and create a shortcut. The shortcut is like any other shortcut; right-click and choose Properties to change the name or the icon -- the default icons look like ghostly apparitions, if you can see them at all. It's not as cool as a Win7 gadget, but we're getting there. To date we haven't seen any intelligent tiles -- ones with interactive controls on the face, like a Play button on the Audio tile -- but many people figure that will come when the Win10 consumer beta version hits early next year. You can drag the top bar on the Start menu and make the entire menu taller or shorter, within the confines of your screen. But you can't adjust the size left to right. The Start menu gets wider and narrower to accommodate the tiles you've pinned in it. If you have too many tiles, they flop over to the right, and you can scroll to see them. Many of you to me and to Microsoft that you don't want File Explorer to open to the new, made-up Home. In Windows 7, Explorer opened to the Libraries folder. I believe this trick is previously undocumented. Right-click the new icon and choose Pin to Start. That puts a tile on the right, Metro side of the start menu. Left-click the new Metro tile and drag it to the taskbar. Here's another windows 10 all users desktop to the same theme, using an old Control Panel hack. Do you remember the Windows 7 Devices and Printers list. It's still around in Windows 10, but you have to dig for it. There's an easy way to stick a link to the Devices and Printers list on your desktop, and from there move it into the Start menu. Right-click the Start button and choose Control Panel. In the Hardware and Sound section, left-click the line marked View Devices and Printers and drag it onto your desktop. Drop it on your desktop, and you have a new shortcut into the Devices and Printers list. Right-click on windows 10 all users desktop icon and choose Pin to Start. It'll show up as a tile on the right Metro side of the Start menu. Many of the old Control Panel applets can be pinned in a similar fashion. Generally, pinning a drive or folder to the left side of the Start menu is pretty easy. Most of the time, you can left-click and drag the folder or drive to the Start icon, then place it on the Start menu. If that doesn't work, navigate to the drive or folder, right-click on it, and choose Pin to Start. That puts a tile on the right side of the Start menu. Click and drag that tile to the top of the left side of the Start menu; the resulting pinned item will sweep you directly to the chosen drive or folder. Nothing like an old trick with a new twist. Windows shortcuts have the power to launch File Explorer and have it start off in the directory of your choice. Right-click any open spot on the desktop and choose New, Shortcut. In the Target box, type explorer. There's a full list of valid switches in. Use quotes around the folder name, if it has spaces. Click the General tab and give the shortcut a name. You windows 10 all users desktop also click the Change Icon button on the Shortcut tab and pick a different icon. Tech Republic has a good overview of. Click on the icon and drag it to the Start button. When the Start menu unfolds, drop the icon onto the top of the left side of the Start menu. If you want a Metro tile on the right side of the Start menu, drag the new Start menu item over to the right. You can change the background color on the Start menu, but in doing so, you change the background color on the taskbar and the title bar of all of your windows. Knock yourself out: Right-click on an empty spot in the Start menu either side and choose Personalize. By default, Windows adapts the background color to make it stand out -- that's the default setting, in the upper-left corner. You can choose from the offered colors or mix one of your own, manually adjusting intensity, hue, saturation, and brightness. Probably more effort than it's worth, but you can finally. That way you can avoid digging all the way down to your desktop to empty the Recycle Bin. I figure I do that once every six months. Right-click the Recycle Bin on the desktop and choose Pin to Start. In Windows 7, you could right-click on any entry in the Start menu, choose Properties, and assign a shortcut key to the program. Typing the shortcut would invoke the program. In Win10, you have to be a little more devious. Left-click on any program windows 10 all users desktop in the Start menu, and drag it to the desktop. Windows creates a shortcut to the program. Right-click on the new shortcut and choose Properties. Assign a shortcut key combination, exactly as you would in Windows 7. You have to keep track of your own shortcut keys. Win10 inherits Win7's inability to warn you about duplicated shortcut keys, and if you assign the same key combination to two different shortcuts, heaven only knows which one will respond first.

Prevent users from changing desktop background Before you begin, make sure to set an image as default on the desktop using the Settings app or right-clicking an image and selecting Set as desktop background. If not to often, then you could keep the. That is actually a redirect anyway. After that user cannot change or pin programs to start layout. The shortcut is for our field technicians to run a setup for our design software resources. Enable the policy option Hide and disable all items on the desktop as shown below. For those of you who have asked, I tried and tried but couldn't figure out how to stuff all of those Metro app icons into different folders. Note: Junction Points are visible in Windows Explorer only when Show Hidden Files, Folders, and Drives is selected and Hide Protected Operating System Files is deselected. There are exceptions and I needed a way to get the setup finalized for them, the field techs.

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