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    Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain

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    • CCWTechC
      CCWTech
      last edited by

      Yes I did do a gpupdate /force and a logout / logon, also tried a reboot. No joy.

      @Kelly Method 1 - what GPO copy do I need to setup for it please?

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • DustinB3403D
        DustinB3403
        last edited by

        Do you have this GPO set to reapply?

        CCWTechC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • CCWTechC
          CCWTech @DustinB3403
          last edited by

          @dustinb3403 said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

          Do you have this GPO set to reapply?

          I'm not sure. Can you tell me how I would know and/or change it to reapply?

          DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • DustinB3403D
            DustinB3403 @CCWTech
            last edited by

            @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

            @dustinb3403 said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

            Do you have this GPO set to reapply?

            I'm not sure. Can you tell me how I would know and/or change it to reapply?

            This is an option on the GPO itself, run once, whereas you probably want "replace" where it will replace the local settings every time the GPO is run.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • black3dynamiteB
              black3dynamite
              last edited by

              Here's what I do to set up a wallpaper background.
              0_1536245053360_86cb508d-322f-4200-8d73-48d4386eaf90-image.png

              0_1536245103737_fb35b847-10b8-4a21-9fd5-8a6ba7514952-image.png

              0_1536245136686_9e039dca-38e6-463e-a1af-abdae0593110-image.png

              CCWTechC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
              • KellyK
                Kelly
                last edited by Kelly

                @black3dynamite Has it. The key is that the file copy is a computer policy and the desktop wallpaper is a user policy. Best practices would have you put them into different policies so that you can update the computer policy without having to process everything that hasn't changed in the user policy.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • CCWTechC
                  CCWTech @black3dynamite
                  last edited by

                  @black3dynamite So if you are pointing to the unc path on the server, what good does it do to copy the file to the local machine?

                  DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • DustinB3403D
                    DustinB3403 @CCWTech
                    last edited by

                    @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                    @black3dynamite So if you are pointing to the unc path on the server, what good does it do to copy the file to the local machine?

                    So the machine can go offline and keep your settings.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • CCWTechC
                      CCWTech
                      last edited by

                      The big question though is not how to apply it. But how to make it update when you change the photo. @black3dynamite have you tested that part?

                      DustinB3403D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • DustinB3403D
                        DustinB3403 @CCWTech
                        last edited by

                        @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                        The big question though is not how to apply it. But how to make it update when you change the photo. @black3dynamite have you tested that part?

                        You "update" the GPO settings.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • DustinB3403D
                          DustinB3403
                          last edited by

                          The easiest way I've found to get a GPO to update, is to one, set it to "update" and in cases like screensavers (backgrounds etc), literally just name the anything else.

                          "bg.jpg" the new one gets changed to "bg1.jpg" etc.

                          CCWTechC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • CCWTechC
                            CCWTech @DustinB3403
                            last edited by

                            @dustinb3403 said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                            The easiest way I've found to get a GPO to update, is to one, set it to "update" and in cases like screensavers (backgrounds etc), literally just name the anything else.

                            "bg.jpg" the new one gets changed to "bg1.jpg" etc.

                            Trying to do this without the user touching GPO. I'm still fuzzy on how to set the GPO to update?

                            KellyK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • KellyK
                              Kelly @CCWTech
                              last edited by

                              @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                              @dustinb3403 said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                              The easiest way I've found to get a GPO to update, is to one, set it to "update" and in cases like screensavers (backgrounds etc), literally just name the anything else.

                              "bg.jpg" the new one gets changed to "bg1.jpg" etc.

                              Trying to do this without the user touching GPO. I'm still fuzzy on how to set the GPO to update?

                              You only change the file copy GPO. I would have a different file name in your source file like 20180907_info.jpg. That way the GPO will process because it detects a change event. You can have the same destination file.

                              CCWTechC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                              • CCWTechC
                                CCWTech @Kelly
                                last edited by

                                @kelly said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                @dustinb3403 said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                The easiest way I've found to get a GPO to update, is to one, set it to "update" and in cases like screensavers (backgrounds etc), literally just name the anything else.

                                "bg.jpg" the new one gets changed to "bg1.jpg" etc.

                                Trying to do this without the user touching GPO. I'm still fuzzy on how to set the GPO to update?

                                You only change the file copy GPO. I would have a different file name in your source file like 20180907_info.jpg. That way the GPO will process because it detects a change event. You can have the same destination file.

                                That would require editing of the GPO that applies the wallpaper.

                                KellyK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • KellyK
                                  Kelly @CCWTech
                                  last edited by Kelly

                                  @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                  @kelly said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                  @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                  @dustinb3403 said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                  The easiest way I've found to get a GPO to update, is to one, set it to "update" and in cases like screensavers (backgrounds etc), literally just name the anything else.

                                  "bg.jpg" the new one gets changed to "bg1.jpg" etc.

                                  Trying to do this without the user touching GPO. I'm still fuzzy on how to set the GPO to update?

                                  You only change the file copy GPO. I would have a different file name in your source file like 20180907_info.jpg. That way the GPO will process because it detects a change event. You can have the same destination file.

                                  That would require editing of the GPO that applies the wallpaper.

                                  It depends on how you set it up. My preferred method, and I believe best practice, is that you split your policies. The User policy applies the wallpaper based on <localpath>\picture.jpg. The computer policy copies the wallpaper from <remotepath>\20180907_picture.jpg to <localpath>\picture.jpg. When you need to update the wallpaper you place 2018xxxxx_picture.jpg in <remotepath> and update the policy to the new file name. When the machine reboots or refreshes its policies it copies the file from <remotepath> to <localpath>. When the user logs in the user policy is applied which uses the same file name (because as far as it is concerned nothing changed), but the new wallpaper is loaded because it is a different image.

                                  Does that make sense?

                                  CCWTechC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                                  • CCWTechC
                                    CCWTech @Kelly
                                    last edited by

                                    @kelly said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                    @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                    @kelly said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                    @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                    @dustinb3403 said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                    The easiest way I've found to get a GPO to update, is to one, set it to "update" and in cases like screensavers (backgrounds etc), literally just name the anything else.

                                    "bg.jpg" the new one gets changed to "bg1.jpg" etc.

                                    Trying to do this without the user touching GPO. I'm still fuzzy on how to set the GPO to update?

                                    You only change the file copy GPO. I would have a different file name in your source file like 20180907_info.jpg. That way the GPO will process because it detects a change event. You can have the same destination file.

                                    That would require editing of the GPO that applies the wallpaper.

                                    It depends on how you set it up. My preferred method, and I believe best practice, is that you split your policies. The User policy applies the wallpaper based on <localpath>\picture.jpg. The computer policy copies the wallpaper from <remotepath>\20180907_picture.jpg to <localpath>\picture.jpg. When you need to update the wallpaper you place 2018xxxxx_picture.jpg in <remotepath> and update the policy to the new file name. When the machine reboots or refreshes its policies it copies the file from <remotepath> to <localpath>. When the user logs in the user policy is applied which uses the same file name (because as far as it is concerned nothing changed), but the new wallpaper is loaded because it is a different image.

                                    Does that make sense?

                                    Yes, so I need to point the wallpaper to load it from the computer not the server?

                                    KellyK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • KellyK
                                      Kelly @CCWTech
                                      last edited by

                                      @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                      @kelly said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                      @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                      @kelly said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                      @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                      @dustinb3403 said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                      The easiest way I've found to get a GPO to update, is to one, set it to "update" and in cases like screensavers (backgrounds etc), literally just name the anything else.

                                      "bg.jpg" the new one gets changed to "bg1.jpg" etc.

                                      Trying to do this without the user touching GPO. I'm still fuzzy on how to set the GPO to update?

                                      You only change the file copy GPO. I would have a different file name in your source file like 20180907_info.jpg. That way the GPO will process because it detects a change event. You can have the same destination file.

                                      That would require editing of the GPO that applies the wallpaper.

                                      It depends on how you set it up. My preferred method, and I believe best practice, is that you split your policies. The User policy applies the wallpaper based on <localpath>\picture.jpg. The computer policy copies the wallpaper from <remotepath>\20180907_picture.jpg to <localpath>\picture.jpg. When you need to update the wallpaper you place 2018xxxxx_picture.jpg in <remotepath> and update the policy to the new file name. When the machine reboots or refreshes its policies it copies the file from <remotepath> to <localpath>. When the user logs in the user policy is applied which uses the same file name (because as far as it is concerned nothing changed), but the new wallpaper is loaded because it is a different image.

                                      Does that make sense?

                                      Yes, so I need to point the wallpaper to load it from the computer not the server?

                                      Yes, for the user policy it is the local path on the computer.

                                      CCWTechC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • I
                                        i3
                                        last edited by

                                        I have a similar issue. Followed the directions and ensure the gpo's get applied. I can verify the file gets copied down locally and the policy is applied to set it as the wallpaper, however, the wallpaper shown on all pc's is just a blank black screen. If I go into personalize to set it manually the correct local file is set but just does not show up.

                                        Windows 2012 R2
                                        Windows 7 pro and Windows 10 pro both exhibit the same behaviors.

                                        KellyK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • KellyK
                                          Kelly @i3
                                          last edited by

                                          @i3 said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                          I have a similar issue. Followed the directions and ensure the gpo's get applied. I can verify the file gets copied down locally and the policy is applied to set it as the wallpaper, however, the wallpaper shown on all pc's is just a blank black screen. If I go into personalize to set it manually the correct local file is set but just does not show up.

                                          Windows 2012 R2
                                          Windows 7 pro and Windows 10 pro both exhibit the same behaviors.

                                          Can you post your rsop or gpresult.html?

                                          I 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • CCWTechC
                                            CCWTech @Kelly
                                            last edited by

                                            @kelly said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                            @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                            @kelly said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                            @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                            @kelly said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                            @ccwtech said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                            @dustinb3403 said in Desktop photo for all PC's in the domain:

                                            The easiest way I've found to get a GPO to update, is to one, set it to "update" and in cases like screensavers (backgrounds etc), literally just name the anything else.

                                            "bg.jpg" the new one gets changed to "bg1.jpg" etc.

                                            Trying to do this without the user touching GPO. I'm still fuzzy on how to set the GPO to update?

                                            You only change the file copy GPO. I would have a different file name in your source file like 20180907_info.jpg. That way the GPO will process because it detects a change event. You can have the same destination file.

                                            That would require editing of the GPO that applies the wallpaper.

                                            It depends on how you set it up. My preferred method, and I believe best practice, is that you split your policies. The User policy applies the wallpaper based on <localpath>\picture.jpg. The computer policy copies the wallpaper from <remotepath>\20180907_picture.jpg to <localpath>\picture.jpg. When you need to update the wallpaper you place 2018xxxxx_picture.jpg in <remotepath> and update the policy to the new file name. When the machine reboots or refreshes its policies it copies the file from <remotepath> to <localpath>. When the user logs in the user policy is applied which uses the same file name (because as far as it is concerned nothing changed), but the new wallpaper is loaded because it is a different image.

                                            Does that make sense?

                                            Yes, so I need to point the wallpaper to load it from the computer not the server?

                                            Yes, for the user policy it is the local path on the computer.

                                            Kelly, when you move the file will it update if you don't update the policy with the new file name but instead keep the name the same in the wallpaper gpo?

                                            KellyK 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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