Personalize windows update




















Was this information helpful? Yes No. Thank you! Any more feedback? The more you tell us the more we can help. Can you help us improve? Resolved my issue. Clear instructions.

Easy to follow. No jargon. Pictures helped. Didn't match my screen. Incorrect instructions. Once you choose a picture, you can decide how your picture will fit on your desktop—whether it fills, fits, stretches, tiles, and so on. After selecting your folder, you can also specify how often Windows changes the background picture, whether it shuffles the pictures randomly, and how the pictures should fit your desktop.

And if you prefer to keep things simple, you can use a solid color as your background. Unfortunately, the Personalization screen only lets you select one background, no matter how many monitors you have. If you do have multiple monitors, you can set a different background picture for each monitor by using File Explorer. They also both provide more advanced tools for working with backgrounds on a single monitor. After picking an accent color, your next step is choosing where Windows uses that accent color.

The second option uses the accent color for the title bar of your active window. We do, however, have a quick registry hack that can at least let you keep a black background on your Start menu and Action Center. The second option uses the accent color on the title bar of active windows, though we also have another hack for you if you want to use the accent color on inactive windows , as well. And finally, you can enable a dark mode for settings and apps.

Next, we move on to the Windows lock screen settings. The lock screen, remember, is the screen you click to slide out of the way so you can get to the sign in screen where you enter your user name and password. You can also set the lock screen background to be one of your pictures or a slideshow of pictures in a folder on your computer.

It works the same way as setting your desktop background. If you select a picture, just point Windows to the file you want to use. The advanced settings let you include your camera roll as a source for pictures, use only pictures that fit your screen, and select whether to show the lock screen instead of turning off the screen when the PC is inactive. If you select this last option, you can also set the screen to turn off after a set amount of time, or not at all.

Back on the lock screen settings, you also have a few more options available. You can also specify that the lock screen background picture is used as your sign-in screen background as well, though we have some other ways you might prefer to change your sign in screen background instead. Windows 10 finally brings control of themes into the Settings app instead of the Control Panel app.

Themes let you coordinate and save a desktop background, accent color, sound scheme, and mouse cursors as a set you can reload more easily. You can click each of the theme categories—Background, Color, and so on—to set what you want to use. These links really just take you to other places in the Settings app where you can make the changes. Windows 10 still includes the old Fonts tool in the Control Panel, but you can now also manage fonts within the Settings app.

This page shows all the font families installed on your PC. The app displays a sample of each font and how many faces it includes. You can click any font family to get more details and adjust some basic font settings, as well as uninstall the font. Next up are the Start menu options. However, due to the default settings, home users are often forced to accept these updates when arriving, whether it is convenient or not.

To avoid this situation, you can simply adjust how Windows receives and installs updates. In configuration menu, several built-in Windows update-controlling tools are available.

But most of you haven't taken time to root via the settings menu to find them and make adjustments to gain a better computing experience. With a few tweaks, you can control Windows 10 update process, as well as when and how updates occur. The following is the guide on how to modify Windows 10 update.

In Windows 10, when clicking the Start button located in the bottom right-hand corner of the typical Desktop, you can choose the Settings feature. When clicking Check for Update button, Windows will check for available updates and automatically download and install them.

If you don't want to use this feature to force update now, you can change Windows 10 update settings to perform the update based on your timetable. The common way to control the update process is to specify the time period each day.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000