Change the Windows 7 logon screen

Follow the procedure below to change the Windows 7 logon screen.

1. You will need a registry file which can be downloaded here: click Extract the file and then double click it to add it to your registry.

2. Browse to this location:

C:\Windows\System32\oobe (“C” is your Windows Seven Installation drive)

3. Create a new folder named Info. Then, create a new folder inside the Info folder and rename it as backgrounds.

4. Copy the image file to this folder and rename it as backgroundDefault. Note that the image must be in JPG format and the size should be less than 256 KB.

5. When you reboot your system you will see the change.

The following files (sorted by width-to-height ratio) are supported in C:\Windows\System32\oobe\Info\Backgrounds folder:

* backgroundDefault.jpg
* background768×1280.jpg (0.6)
* background900×1440.jpg (0.625)
* background960×1280.jpg (0.75)
* background1024×1280.jpg (0.8)
* background1280×1024.jpg (1.25)
* background1024×768.jpg (1.33-)
* background1280×960.jpg (1.33-)
* background1600×1200.jpg (1.33-)
* background1440×900.jpg (1.6)
* background1920×1200.jpg (1.6)
* background1280×768.jpg (1.66-)
* background1360×768.jpg (1.770833-)

Windows 7: set default user logon picture icon

In building a base image for Windows 7, I wanted to set a default user account picture for all user accounts (the company logo). There is a Group Policy setting which allows you to apply a default user logon picture in the Welcome Screen for all user accounts.
Note: As Home Editions of Windows do not include the Group Policy Editor, you need to configure this setting using a Registry-based Policy. This article does not address that issue.

1. Click Start, type gpedit.msc and press ENTER

2. Go to the following branch:

Computer Configuration | Administrative Templates | Control Panel | User Accounts
3. Double-click Apply the default user logon picture to all users

4. Set it to Enabled

5. Exit the Group Policy Editor.

This policy setting allows an administrator to standardize the logon pictures for all users on a system to the default user picture. One application for this policy setting is to standardize the logon pictures to a company logo. If this Policy is enabled, the Welcome Screen uses the default user picture which is stored at %PROGRAMDATA%\Microsoft\User Account Pictures\user.bmp. The default guest picture is stored at %PROGRAMDATA%\Microsoft\User Account Pictures\guest.bmp. If the default pictures do not exist, an empty frame is displayed. To display your preferred image or the company logo, replace the file user.bmp (128×128 px) in the following folder:

%PROGRAMDATA%\Microsoft\User Account Pictures
Also note that if you enable the above Policy, you’ll see an empty frame at the top of the Windows Vista Start menu where the user account picture normally displays. And the Change your picture option in the User Accounts applet will be removed.

Google Apps issue – conflicting account

Oh WOW! That was a headache!

So I have a several domains setup to use Google apps, mainly for the email functionality. Google is transitioning to a new infrastructure

Google Apps accounts are transitioning to a new infrastructure. This big change is being made so Google Apps accounts can start accessing dozens of Google services beyond the core suite of messaging and collaboration apps……blah blah blah

The problem I had was that I use a lot of different Google services (Analytics, AdWords, AdSense, etc) and I have used the same email address for these accounts. This email address was part of my Google Apps. When my Google Apps was transitioned, I had a problem of conflicting accounts with the other Google serviced I used. When I tried to log on to my Analytics account, it told me that that account was in use by another user. I was effectly locked out of all of Analytics, AdWords, and AdSense. Anyone who used the free version of Google Apps, knows that it is impossible to get support on it.  I found a phone number for Google AdWords (because that make money directly off of the user there) and got sent on a wild goose chase trying to resolve my issue. I hit a dead end in finding a number for Google Apps Enterprise support (I use the free addition). So after hours of trying to figure it out, this is how I resolved the Google Apps issue of conflicting accounts.

This document was the catalysis to solving the issue.

Basically I had to clear all of my cookies and then log on to Google with a temp account: user%mydomain@gtempaccount.com – user%mydomain is the email address you were previously using with @ replaced by % (mine was user%mdsaba.com@gtempaccount.com), using the same password as before.

Then I went to the dashboard: https://www.google.com/dashboard/

From here you can: move data out of this account. It will take to you a two column screen and allow your to log on to your Google Apps account and move the data.

Problem solved. Thanks for nothing Google support.

Which web browsers are color managed?

In your journey through the interwebs a question you should ask: is my browser color managed. Or better yet, is my browser ICC Version 4 ready.?.

Well, you may ask, what is ICC? In short, the International Color Consortium was setup to define a standard of color between different devices.  Let’s use digital photography as an example. When you take a digital photograph, without standards, it could look different on your camera, then on your computer monitor, then on the web, and also when you print. ICC was setup to define how it should look.  Device profiles provide color management systems with the information necessary to convert color data between native device color spaces and device independent color spaces.

This could go one for pages, but we will leave it at that and get to the good part: which web browsers are color managed.

  • Safari is ICC Version 4 ready
  • IE9 is also ICC Version 4 ready
  • IE8 (and I assume below) is not color manged and does not support ICC profiles
  • Firefox (up through the latest) is only ICC Version 2 ready. It use to be the standard for color managed browsers.
  • Chrome is not color manged and does not support ICC profiles
In conclusion, if you are worried about true color as you surf the tronz, then buy a Mac and use Safari. Or if you must use Windows then upgrade to IE9. Firefox will get you half way there and works in most cases. Chrome and earlier versions of IE will not cut it and you should not use these browsers if you are concerned with true color.
You can visit this link to test your browser’s capability: http://www.color.org/version4html.xalter