Windows 11 All-in-One For Dummies. Ciprian Adrian Rusen

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Windows 11 All-in-One For Dummies - Ciprian Adrian Rusen


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you read the Microsoft help documentation, you may think that Windows 11 keeps one lock screen for all users, but it doesn’t. Instead, it has a lock screen for each individual user and another lock screen for the system as a whole.

      If you’re using the system and you lock it — say, tap your picture on the Start menu and choose Lock — Windows 11 shows your personal lock screen, with the settings and data you’ve chosen. If you swipe up or click, you’re asked to provide your PIN or password. There’s no intervening step to ask which user should log in.

      If, instead of locking the system when you leave it, you tap your picture and choose Sign Out, Windows 11 behaves differently. It shows the system’s lock screen, with the system’s settings. Your lock screen and data are nowhere to be seen. If you drag or swipe to go through the lock screen, you’re asked to choose which user will log in.

      Bottom line: If you change your lock screen using the techniques in this chapter, you change only your lock screen. Windows’ idea of a lock screen stays the same.

      Adding and removing apps on the lock screen

      Badges are the little icons that appear at the bottom of the lock screen. They exist to tell you something about your computer at a glance, without having to log in — how many email messages are unread, when your next meeting is, and so on. Some badges just appear on the lock screen, no matter what you do. For example, if you have an internet connection, a network badge appears on the lock screen. If you’re using a tablet or laptop, the battery status appears; there’s nothing you can do about it.

      In addition to the badges that Windows 11 displays automatically, you can also choose to add a quick status badge that is important to you. The question I most often hear about badges is, “Why can’t I just choose them all?” Good question. The apps that support these badges update their information periodically — every 15 minutes, in some cases. If you have a badge on your lock screen, the lock screen app that controls the badge must wake up every so often, so it can retrieve the data and put it on the lock screen. Putting everything on the lock screen drains your computer’s battery and this may be an important reason why you can choose only one app to show a detailed status.

      Here’s how to pick and choose your quick status badge:

      1  Click or tap the start icon and then the Settings icon.

      2 On the left, choose Personalization.

      3 On the right side of the Settings window, choose Lock Screen.

      4 Click or tap the Lock Screen Status drop-down list, and choose the app you want from the list (see Figure 2-6).Choosing None means that no app can display a detailed status on the lock screen. Your changes are applied immediately.

      

Apps must be specially designed to display information on the lock screen. You’re given a choice of all the apps that have registered with Windows 11 as being capable of displaying a quick status badge on the lock screen.

      Go back out to the lock screen — click or tap the start icon, your picture, and then Lock — and see whether you like the changes. If you don’t like what you see, start over.

Snapshot shows Choose which app displays detailed information on the lock screen.

      FIGURE 2-6: Choose which app displays detailed information on the lock screen.

      In this section, I step you through setting up a PIN and tell you how to show your face to Windows Hello.

      Creating a PIN

      Everybody has PIN codes for ATM cards, telephones, just about everything.

      

Reusing PIN codes on multiple devices (and credit cards) is dangerous — somebody looks over your shoulder, watches you type your Windows 11 PIN, and then lifts your wallet. Such nefarious folks can have a good time, unless the PINs are different. Word to the wise, eh?

      1 Click or tap the start icon, the Settings icon, and then Accounts.

      2 On the right, choose Sign-In Options.The sign-in settings for your account appear, as shown in Figure 2-7.

      3 Click or tap PIN (Windows Hello) and then Set Up.Windows 11 asks you to verify your user account password.

      4 Type your password and then click or tap OK.Windows 11 gives you a chance to type your PIN, as shown in Figure 2-8, and then retype it to confirm it. Note: Most ATM PINs are four digits, but you can go longer, if you want — Windows 11 can handle any PIN you can throw at it.

      5 Type your PIN, confirm it, and click or tap OK.You can include letters and symbols in your PIN, not just digits.The PIN is set and you can log in with it.

Snapshot shows the sign-in options available in Windows 11.

      FIGURE 2-7: The sign-in options available in Windows 11.

Snapshot shows Creating a PIN is easy.

      FIGURE 2-8: Creating a PIN is easy.

Windows 10 offered picture passwords too. However, most people didn’t use them, and they were also not that secure. Therefore, in Windows 11, Microsoft decided to hide them by default. They still exist, but you must jump through some hoops to enable them. I don’t like them, and I think that logging in with a PIN or Windows Hello is a lot faster and safer.

      Windows Hello

      Windows Hello offers biometric authentication — which is a lot faster than using a password or a PIN. The Windows Hello technology includes fingerprint or face recognition (or both) when you use a specially designed camera or fingerprint reader (or both).

      Microsoft is gradually implementing fingerprint recognition with older finger scanners as well. But the hallmark Hello scan for your shining face is limited to fancy cameras with infrared sensors, which are included on an increasing number of Windows 11 laptops and tablets. There are some USB webcams too, such as the Logitech Brio Ultra HD webcam and Lenovo 500 FHD webcam, but they’re harder to find and, with few exceptions, more expensive than normal webcams.


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