Windows 10: How to boot straight to desktop without ever seeing the “logging you now in” screen?












1















How to boot STRAIGHT to the desktop on Windows 10 WITHOUT ever seeing the "Logging you now in" screen?



This link removes the necessity for the password authenticication (check!)

This link for Win8 disables showing the login (check! but nothing changes on Win10!)



When Windows 10 boots, I still see twice (2 second counts) showing the login screen once (static background below) then automatically logging me in with the round "in progresss" circle dots animation.



That means screen fading effect from black "dos" into this useless screen, then fade out, and fading back in to the loading of the destop which all togeher takes 2 seconds and oh so ugly.



How to bypass seeing the login screens all together and going straight from the black dos screen to the desktop?



Bottom line: I don't want to ever see the logging screen during post! But how? Any ideas or suggestions are welcome and highly appreciated. PS I dont want to use hacky third party programs, just in-Windows-10-solutions please that are safe and built in.



enter image description here



Before you start complaining about duplicate post, do your research!

Entirely different topic about the start menu

Entirely different topic for Windows 8 about skipping the GUI tiles

Nothing I have found online has solved my question!










share|improve this question

























  • I'm confused about your motive, is it because of its ugliness and 2 seconds of loading?

    – Cosco Tech
    Jul 31 '16 at 18:03













  • Thanks @Cosco Tech for your question, I will clarify my motiv further: its because of its uselessness of the 2 second fade-in-and-fade-out waste that I just dont need to see! Even not if the background would be a beautifull sea mermaid of my dreams ;) I still want to skip this entirely useless part alltogether and boot directly into my desktop, lowering the whole bootprocess from 3 seconds to an stonishing 1 second boottime on my dual M.2 PCIE NVMe Raid 0 ssd configuration.

    – Sam
    Aug 1 '16 at 19:30
















1















How to boot STRAIGHT to the desktop on Windows 10 WITHOUT ever seeing the "Logging you now in" screen?



This link removes the necessity for the password authenticication (check!)

This link for Win8 disables showing the login (check! but nothing changes on Win10!)



When Windows 10 boots, I still see twice (2 second counts) showing the login screen once (static background below) then automatically logging me in with the round "in progresss" circle dots animation.



That means screen fading effect from black "dos" into this useless screen, then fade out, and fading back in to the loading of the destop which all togeher takes 2 seconds and oh so ugly.



How to bypass seeing the login screens all together and going straight from the black dos screen to the desktop?



Bottom line: I don't want to ever see the logging screen during post! But how? Any ideas or suggestions are welcome and highly appreciated. PS I dont want to use hacky third party programs, just in-Windows-10-solutions please that are safe and built in.



enter image description here



Before you start complaining about duplicate post, do your research!

Entirely different topic about the start menu

Entirely different topic for Windows 8 about skipping the GUI tiles

Nothing I have found online has solved my question!










share|improve this question

























  • I'm confused about your motive, is it because of its ugliness and 2 seconds of loading?

    – Cosco Tech
    Jul 31 '16 at 18:03













  • Thanks @Cosco Tech for your question, I will clarify my motiv further: its because of its uselessness of the 2 second fade-in-and-fade-out waste that I just dont need to see! Even not if the background would be a beautifull sea mermaid of my dreams ;) I still want to skip this entirely useless part alltogether and boot directly into my desktop, lowering the whole bootprocess from 3 seconds to an stonishing 1 second boottime on my dual M.2 PCIE NVMe Raid 0 ssd configuration.

    – Sam
    Aug 1 '16 at 19:30














1












1








1


1






How to boot STRAIGHT to the desktop on Windows 10 WITHOUT ever seeing the "Logging you now in" screen?



This link removes the necessity for the password authenticication (check!)

This link for Win8 disables showing the login (check! but nothing changes on Win10!)



When Windows 10 boots, I still see twice (2 second counts) showing the login screen once (static background below) then automatically logging me in with the round "in progresss" circle dots animation.



That means screen fading effect from black "dos" into this useless screen, then fade out, and fading back in to the loading of the destop which all togeher takes 2 seconds and oh so ugly.



How to bypass seeing the login screens all together and going straight from the black dos screen to the desktop?



Bottom line: I don't want to ever see the logging screen during post! But how? Any ideas or suggestions are welcome and highly appreciated. PS I dont want to use hacky third party programs, just in-Windows-10-solutions please that are safe and built in.



enter image description here



Before you start complaining about duplicate post, do your research!

Entirely different topic about the start menu

Entirely different topic for Windows 8 about skipping the GUI tiles

Nothing I have found online has solved my question!










share|improve this question
















How to boot STRAIGHT to the desktop on Windows 10 WITHOUT ever seeing the "Logging you now in" screen?



This link removes the necessity for the password authenticication (check!)

This link for Win8 disables showing the login (check! but nothing changes on Win10!)



When Windows 10 boots, I still see twice (2 second counts) showing the login screen once (static background below) then automatically logging me in with the round "in progresss" circle dots animation.



That means screen fading effect from black "dos" into this useless screen, then fade out, and fading back in to the loading of the destop which all togeher takes 2 seconds and oh so ugly.



How to bypass seeing the login screens all together and going straight from the black dos screen to the desktop?



Bottom line: I don't want to ever see the logging screen during post! But how? Any ideas or suggestions are welcome and highly appreciated. PS I dont want to use hacky third party programs, just in-Windows-10-solutions please that are safe and built in.



enter image description here



Before you start complaining about duplicate post, do your research!

Entirely different topic about the start menu

Entirely different topic for Windows 8 about skipping the GUI tiles

Nothing I have found online has solved my question!







windows windows-10 boot login-screen auto-login






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 20 '17 at 10:17









Community

1




1










asked Jul 31 '16 at 12:35









SamSam

73316




73316













  • I'm confused about your motive, is it because of its ugliness and 2 seconds of loading?

    – Cosco Tech
    Jul 31 '16 at 18:03













  • Thanks @Cosco Tech for your question, I will clarify my motiv further: its because of its uselessness of the 2 second fade-in-and-fade-out waste that I just dont need to see! Even not if the background would be a beautifull sea mermaid of my dreams ;) I still want to skip this entirely useless part alltogether and boot directly into my desktop, lowering the whole bootprocess from 3 seconds to an stonishing 1 second boottime on my dual M.2 PCIE NVMe Raid 0 ssd configuration.

    – Sam
    Aug 1 '16 at 19:30



















  • I'm confused about your motive, is it because of its ugliness and 2 seconds of loading?

    – Cosco Tech
    Jul 31 '16 at 18:03













  • Thanks @Cosco Tech for your question, I will clarify my motiv further: its because of its uselessness of the 2 second fade-in-and-fade-out waste that I just dont need to see! Even not if the background would be a beautifull sea mermaid of my dreams ;) I still want to skip this entirely useless part alltogether and boot directly into my desktop, lowering the whole bootprocess from 3 seconds to an stonishing 1 second boottime on my dual M.2 PCIE NVMe Raid 0 ssd configuration.

    – Sam
    Aug 1 '16 at 19:30

















I'm confused about your motive, is it because of its ugliness and 2 seconds of loading?

– Cosco Tech
Jul 31 '16 at 18:03







I'm confused about your motive, is it because of its ugliness and 2 seconds of loading?

– Cosco Tech
Jul 31 '16 at 18:03















Thanks @Cosco Tech for your question, I will clarify my motiv further: its because of its uselessness of the 2 second fade-in-and-fade-out waste that I just dont need to see! Even not if the background would be a beautifull sea mermaid of my dreams ;) I still want to skip this entirely useless part alltogether and boot directly into my desktop, lowering the whole bootprocess from 3 seconds to an stonishing 1 second boottime on my dual M.2 PCIE NVMe Raid 0 ssd configuration.

– Sam
Aug 1 '16 at 19:30





Thanks @Cosco Tech for your question, I will clarify my motiv further: its because of its uselessness of the 2 second fade-in-and-fade-out waste that I just dont need to see! Even not if the background would be a beautifull sea mermaid of my dreams ;) I still want to skip this entirely useless part alltogether and boot directly into my desktop, lowering the whole bootprocess from 3 seconds to an stonishing 1 second boottime on my dual M.2 PCIE NVMe Raid 0 ssd configuration.

– Sam
Aug 1 '16 at 19:30










1 Answer
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If you're using a tablet, press and hold the tablet mode. A box will pop up that says go to settings. It's self-explanatory from there.






share|improve this answer


























  • This is really a comment and not an answer to the original question. You can always comment on your own posts, and once you have sufficient reputation you will be able to comment on any post. Please read Why do I need 50 reputation to comment? What can I do instead?

    – DavidPostill
    Oct 22 '16 at 21:51











  • Welcome to superuser: While this may or may not answer the question, it would be a better answer if you could provide some explanation and detail on how to do something with as easy to follow instructions. If you feel your answer is correct do these things and reedit. Please take a couple of minutes and read:- superuser.com/help .Answering: superuser.com/help/how-to-answer, again welcome to superuser.Thankyou

    – mic84
    Oct 28 '16 at 12:08













  • No tablet! Standard DESKTOP computer with motherboard, cpu, ram, psu, ssd, hdd, gpu, wifi, utp lan, etc with Win7 64bit EN Professional.

    – Sam
    Oct 29 '16 at 20:10













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1 Answer
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active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









0














If you're using a tablet, press and hold the tablet mode. A box will pop up that says go to settings. It's self-explanatory from there.






share|improve this answer


























  • This is really a comment and not an answer to the original question. You can always comment on your own posts, and once you have sufficient reputation you will be able to comment on any post. Please read Why do I need 50 reputation to comment? What can I do instead?

    – DavidPostill
    Oct 22 '16 at 21:51











  • Welcome to superuser: While this may or may not answer the question, it would be a better answer if you could provide some explanation and detail on how to do something with as easy to follow instructions. If you feel your answer is correct do these things and reedit. Please take a couple of minutes and read:- superuser.com/help .Answering: superuser.com/help/how-to-answer, again welcome to superuser.Thankyou

    – mic84
    Oct 28 '16 at 12:08













  • No tablet! Standard DESKTOP computer with motherboard, cpu, ram, psu, ssd, hdd, gpu, wifi, utp lan, etc with Win7 64bit EN Professional.

    – Sam
    Oct 29 '16 at 20:10


















0














If you're using a tablet, press and hold the tablet mode. A box will pop up that says go to settings. It's self-explanatory from there.






share|improve this answer


























  • This is really a comment and not an answer to the original question. You can always comment on your own posts, and once you have sufficient reputation you will be able to comment on any post. Please read Why do I need 50 reputation to comment? What can I do instead?

    – DavidPostill
    Oct 22 '16 at 21:51











  • Welcome to superuser: While this may or may not answer the question, it would be a better answer if you could provide some explanation and detail on how to do something with as easy to follow instructions. If you feel your answer is correct do these things and reedit. Please take a couple of minutes and read:- superuser.com/help .Answering: superuser.com/help/how-to-answer, again welcome to superuser.Thankyou

    – mic84
    Oct 28 '16 at 12:08













  • No tablet! Standard DESKTOP computer with motherboard, cpu, ram, psu, ssd, hdd, gpu, wifi, utp lan, etc with Win7 64bit EN Professional.

    – Sam
    Oct 29 '16 at 20:10
















0












0








0







If you're using a tablet, press and hold the tablet mode. A box will pop up that says go to settings. It's self-explanatory from there.






share|improve this answer















If you're using a tablet, press and hold the tablet mode. A box will pop up that says go to settings. It's self-explanatory from there.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Oct 28 '16 at 16:27









3498DB

15.8k114762




15.8k114762










answered Oct 22 '16 at 20:37









Ronald A. SuchlandRonald A. Suchland

1




1













  • This is really a comment and not an answer to the original question. You can always comment on your own posts, and once you have sufficient reputation you will be able to comment on any post. Please read Why do I need 50 reputation to comment? What can I do instead?

    – DavidPostill
    Oct 22 '16 at 21:51











  • Welcome to superuser: While this may or may not answer the question, it would be a better answer if you could provide some explanation and detail on how to do something with as easy to follow instructions. If you feel your answer is correct do these things and reedit. Please take a couple of minutes and read:- superuser.com/help .Answering: superuser.com/help/how-to-answer, again welcome to superuser.Thankyou

    – mic84
    Oct 28 '16 at 12:08













  • No tablet! Standard DESKTOP computer with motherboard, cpu, ram, psu, ssd, hdd, gpu, wifi, utp lan, etc with Win7 64bit EN Professional.

    – Sam
    Oct 29 '16 at 20:10





















  • This is really a comment and not an answer to the original question. You can always comment on your own posts, and once you have sufficient reputation you will be able to comment on any post. Please read Why do I need 50 reputation to comment? What can I do instead?

    – DavidPostill
    Oct 22 '16 at 21:51











  • Welcome to superuser: While this may or may not answer the question, it would be a better answer if you could provide some explanation and detail on how to do something with as easy to follow instructions. If you feel your answer is correct do these things and reedit. Please take a couple of minutes and read:- superuser.com/help .Answering: superuser.com/help/how-to-answer, again welcome to superuser.Thankyou

    – mic84
    Oct 28 '16 at 12:08













  • No tablet! Standard DESKTOP computer with motherboard, cpu, ram, psu, ssd, hdd, gpu, wifi, utp lan, etc with Win7 64bit EN Professional.

    – Sam
    Oct 29 '16 at 20:10



















This is really a comment and not an answer to the original question. You can always comment on your own posts, and once you have sufficient reputation you will be able to comment on any post. Please read Why do I need 50 reputation to comment? What can I do instead?

– DavidPostill
Oct 22 '16 at 21:51





This is really a comment and not an answer to the original question. You can always comment on your own posts, and once you have sufficient reputation you will be able to comment on any post. Please read Why do I need 50 reputation to comment? What can I do instead?

– DavidPostill
Oct 22 '16 at 21:51













Welcome to superuser: While this may or may not answer the question, it would be a better answer if you could provide some explanation and detail on how to do something with as easy to follow instructions. If you feel your answer is correct do these things and reedit. Please take a couple of minutes and read:- superuser.com/help .Answering: superuser.com/help/how-to-answer, again welcome to superuser.Thankyou

– mic84
Oct 28 '16 at 12:08







Welcome to superuser: While this may or may not answer the question, it would be a better answer if you could provide some explanation and detail on how to do something with as easy to follow instructions. If you feel your answer is correct do these things and reedit. Please take a couple of minutes and read:- superuser.com/help .Answering: superuser.com/help/how-to-answer, again welcome to superuser.Thankyou

– mic84
Oct 28 '16 at 12:08















No tablet! Standard DESKTOP computer with motherboard, cpu, ram, psu, ssd, hdd, gpu, wifi, utp lan, etc with Win7 64bit EN Professional.

– Sam
Oct 29 '16 at 20:10







No tablet! Standard DESKTOP computer with motherboard, cpu, ram, psu, ssd, hdd, gpu, wifi, utp lan, etc with Win7 64bit EN Professional.

– Sam
Oct 29 '16 at 20:10




















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