OK, now you’ve added it to OSD, but you want to Deploy to your Windows 10 machines in production. Now in OSD, you create a “Run Command Line” Step and add it like so:Ĭmd.exe /c LockScreen\Load_LockScreenDisableToolTips.cmd Reg.exe unload HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\defuser REG ADD “HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\defuser\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\ContentDeliveryManager” /V RotatingLockScreenOverlayEnabled /T REG_DWORD /D 00000000 /F Reg.exe load HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\defuser c:\users\default\ntuser.dat I’ve created the script, added it to my Windows 10 OSD Package, in the same folder I keep my LockScreen Wallpaper. You could push this via Group Policy, but I’m always a fan of using ConfigMgr, so I’ve created a simple script to deploy during OSD. Now that we have the setting, we can deploy it. To change it, you need to set the registry to: “RotatingLockScreenOverlayEnabled”=dword:00000000 After some guess work, I found the key in the registry that pertains to the setting: So now it was time to look for another way to do it. On my test machine, I still saw the tooltips and the settings under personalization still showed the setting as “ON” I enabled the setting, pointed the GPO at the locally copied Wallpaper and checked the box. We still allow our users to change it, but it starts with a corporate branded wallpaper. I am already controlling the initial lock screen image via OSD, which changes a registry setting to point to a wallpaper I copy local. This is a group policy that controls the Lock Screen image and this tooltip. Once I logged in, IE would launch w/ a Bing search about what I had clicked on. Then I noticed in the upper right corner of my lock screen little messages, I could click on it, but nothing would happen. This only came up recently as I’ve been exploring removing the Ctrl+Alt+Del requirement for logon.
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