Logging On

When it comes to the screens you encounter when you log onto a Windows Vista computer, your mileage may vary. What you see depends on how your PC has been set up. For example:

You Get the Windows Welcome Screen

This is what people on standalone or workgroup computers see most of the time (Figure 15-4).

To sign in, click your account name in the list. If no password is required for your account, you proceed to your Windows desktop with no further interruption.

If there is a password associated with your account, you’ll see a place for it (Figure 15-5). Type your password and then press Enter (or click the blue arrow button).

There’s no limit to the number of times you can try to type in a password. With each incorrect guess, you’re told, “The user name or password is incorrect,” and an OK button appears to let you try again. The second time you try, your password hint appears, too (Section 15.2.3), as shown in Figure 15-5.

Tip

If your Caps Lock key is pressed, another balloon lets you know. Otherwise, because you can’t see anything on the screen as you type except dots, you might be trying to type a lowercase password with all capital letters.

You Zoom Straight to the Desktop

If you are the sole account holder, and you’ve set up no password at all for yourself, you can cruise all the way to the desktop without any stops.

This password-free scenario, of course, is not very secure; any evildoer who walks by your machine when you’re in the bathroom has complete access to all of your ...

Get Windows Vista Annoyances now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.