Wallpaper For Windows decorative films are the easiest do-it-yourself (DIY) solution for decorating, adding privacy to windows and glass doors with the beauty of frosted glass, leaded glass, etched glass and stained glass.
For an even more custom look, all designs can be ordered made-to-size.
I just purchased a second hand HP Elitebook but it looks like it was an ex-lease model and has windows 10 enterprise installed. I can't personalize the PC because enterprise isn't activated (eventually I will downgrade to win10 home or pro). Is there a way to edit the registry so that I can add a custom wallpaper? That's all I want to change.
You can set the wallpaper using the Local Group Policy Editor(gpedit.msc), atUser Configuration > Administrative Templates > Desktop > Desktop,group policy "Desktop Wallpaper". Set the policy to Enabled, enter thefile path and click OK.
In the registry, this is set at keyHKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System(you may need to create missing sub-keys).Create two REG_SZ items, one named Wallpaper for the path to theimage file, and the other WallpaperStyle whose value is 4.
Since I updated to Windows 11 I've been having a weird issue. I'm not able to select a different wallpaper for each of my two monitors. In the Personalization>Background menu, upon right clicking on the image to display the context menu, if I select "Set for Desktop 2" it does not change anything. On the other hand if I select "Set for Desktop 1" it changes the background for both monitors. Please note that I have my dual monitor set to Extend and not duplicate.
Hover over the "desktop" app on the taskbar next to the magnifying glass. It should say "Desktop 1" & "New Desktop". Open a New Desktop and remove "Desktop 1". After I did this it worked for me. I hope it works for you too! :)
This fixed it for me. I went to windows 11 > Display Settings > disconnected all monitors but the main one, re-extended my 2nd monitor. Went into Display Settings > Personalization > Background > and then had the right-click option on a recent image to select monitor 1 or 2.
I too, have a need for this. Being able to open more than one window would allow me to play audio and read along with copy sent with the project. Being able to open multiple windows would be a huge help.
If pairing does not work for you, see the Backup Solution section at the bottom of this page to learn how to create mobile wallpaper packages (.mpkg) and how to import them on your mobile device.
We recommend installing the app through the official app store release but you can also directly download the latest app directly from our homepage. For download links and more information, please view our Android download page:
In the Windows app, click on the Mobile button in the upper right corner of the user interface. The mobile device overview will open up. At the bottom device overview, click on the Connect new Device button. Wallpaper Engine will show you a 4-digit PIN that you can use to pair one mobile device in the next step.
In the Wallpaper Engine mobile companion app, click on Add in the lower right corner, followed by clicking on Pair with Computer. The Wallpaper Engine app will search your local network for running instances of Wallpaper Engine for Windows. Your Windows computer should appear after a few seconds, allowing you to connect to it by clicking on it. If you are connecting for the first time, you will be asked to enter the 4-digit PIN (see Windows section above).
Once you have entered your PIN, the status bar in the mobile app turns green and shows which computer its connected to. On the Windows app, the Mobile button is also colored green now to indicate that a mobile connection is active.
You can now simply click on the Send to Mobile Device button on the right-hand side or right-click on any compatible wallpaper and select Send to Mobile Device, followed by selecting your device from the list.
Dynamic and interactive wallpapers that are of the Scene type will first be optimized for use on mobile phones and to ensure compatibility with mobile hardware. This process may take a short while. You will also be asked which quality option you would like to use, especially for high-resolution wallpapers, we recommend trying the Balanced option if you notice performance issues on your mobile device.
Every time I open Power BI Desktop (regardless of whether I'm opening an existing file) it keeps asking me to sign in. We use MFA so this is highly annoying. I've Google'd and found similar threads but from the way-back. I'm running the latest version (2.118.828.0 64-bit (June 2023)).
I went back on my steps, and I do remember messing with the windows Hello configuration for my laptop, just setting up the fingerprint for easy access and whatnot. I do remember checking something like use windows hello for authentication or something (seemed legit at the moment)
Around that time, there was also a small PBI outage, so I didn't think much when the PBI desktop started asking me for the password, and it also requested one of my coworkers to do it, so I htought that was it.
Fast forward 2 weeks and every single time that I open PBI I have 2 sign in twice, and we use MFA which means notifications, codes, everything... twice. Darn!
SO I found this thread, did everything to no avail.
Until (solution is here )
I remembered the windows hello thingy, started searching in my browsers for related stuff, found nothing, Brave (default), Chrome, Edge... Then I remembered that there was this thing called "Internet properties" in which MS stores some global protection things for Edge and other browsers, went there and found:
The option "Enable Integrated Windows Authentication" was checked for me. (as much as I looked for the option in the control panel and windows hello configuration I could not find were to disable the thing I had checked before, but it seems like I was on the right path)
I've just started getting this in the last week or so and it's really annoying. I can see I'm already logged in but this window keeps popping up several times and getting in the way. Seems to make no difference whether I select my work account or just click on the x to close. We're running the September release 2.121.903.0
it's maddening. I've given up using the desktop version. All the comments in here don't work - I suspect there is something else going on and it's just not understood by the people responding.
To make matters worse - this started happening with Teams about a week ago - but thankfully - at least - in the case with Teams it goes away eventually.
I said this to my internal IT staff - I don't think this is a PowerBI issue - I think its an ActiveDirectory / Windows user profile type of issue.
And, if you use the Store version of Power BI Desktop, you don't have to uninstall it, you can run the store version and the web version on your machine separately. I usually run the previous month's version of the web version to deal with things like this.
This wiki is aimed at documenting as much as possible on Windows wallpapers for those who are interested in them. Rather than spending hours trying to obtain information, you can use this wiki to find out as much as you can about your favorite wallpapers, or even just learn about the history behind Windows wallpapers. The information on this wiki may not be the most important info in life, but you may still find some of it interesting. We also have pages on sample pictures and user account pictures if you're interested in those too.
Want to contribute to this wiki? You can! Please check out the guidelines before you do so. You can also contact me to get access to a spreadsheet for details of Windows wallpapers, which is a good idea if you want to make a page.
Arrange, resize, and overlap windows in your ideal layout. You can also arrange multiple apps on the screen to work together as a group in Stage Manager. When you switch to a group, all apps in the group open in the center of the screen.
On your Mac, choose Apple menu > System Settings, then click Desktop & Dock in the sidebar. (You may need to scroll down.) Go to Desktop & Stage Manager on the right, then turn Stage Manager on or off.
Bliss, originally titled Bucolic Green Hills, is the default wallpaper of Microsoft's Windows XP operating system. It is an unedited photograph of a green hill and blue sky with white clouds in the Los Carneros American Viticultural Area of Wine Country, California. Charles O'Rear took the photo in January 1996 and Microsoft bought the rights in 2000. It is estimated that billions of people have seen the picture, possibly making it the most viewed photograph in history.[1]
Former National Geographic photographer Charles O'Rear, a resident of the nearby Napa Valley, took the photo on film with a medium-format Mamiya RZ67 camera while on his way to visit his girlfriend in 1996. While it was widely believed later that the image was manipulated or even created with software such as Adobe Photoshop, O'Rear says it never was.[2][3] He sold it to Westlight for use as a stock photo titled Bucolic Green Hills.[4] Westlight was bought by Corbis in 1998, who digitized its best selling images.[5] Two years following the acquisition, Microsoft's design team selected images to be used as wallpapers in Windows XP. The image would eventually be chosen as the default wallpaper, resulting in the company acquiring the image and renaming it to Bliss.
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