Categories: Future Tech

How To Remove Items and Disable Features from the Ctrl Alt Del Menu

When you are caught up with a Not Responding application what do you do? Or when your computer hangs what do you do? Most computer users, almost instantaneously, hit the Ctrl Alt Del combination without even thinking about what may have gone wrong.

The intention is to launch the Task Manager and select applications or processes to end forcefully. This isn’t always a good thing to do as you may end up killing some important processes.

Now, if you are sharing your computer, you will always be worried that other users may kill something precious. So, why not consider removing the choice (Task Manager Icon) completely from that menu? Other items in the menu can be removed as well and will see each one of them.

Getting Started

Bring up the Run dialog by hitting Windows + R and execute the command gpedit.msc to show the Local Group Policy Editor.

Navigate to User Configuration > Administrative Template > System > Ctrl Alt Del Options. Double click on it to see the options associated and available for modification.

Among five options in the Ctrl Alt Del menu, Lock this Computer, Switch User, Start Task Manager, Change Password and Logoff, four can be disabled or removed.

Open any item by double clicking on it and read the details before changing the settings. You should be sure of what you are doing before you proceed.

Remove Task Manager

If this setting is enabled, the choice will not be shown in the menu. Indeed, the user will not be able to launch the Task Manager by any other means. This also means that no user can kill a process without the administrator’s consent. And hence, stands a way to secure your shared computer.

Remove Lock Computer

If this setting is enabled no user can lock the computer. Quite useful if you are away while someone is using your computer, because there is always a chance of accidental lock which may force you to share your password.

Remove Change Password

If this setting is enabled, no user can demand to change the current password of the machine. Even if somebody had your password, they couldn’t change the system password. However, the system may demand a change from the user under occasions of password expiry and like.

Remove LogOff

If this setting is enabled, the user cannot logoff from the system by using the Ctrl Alt Del menu. However, other options to do so will remain open.

Conclusion

This is a pretty decent and clever way of adding one more level of security on a shared machine.

Via: Lost In Technology

Team TechPanda

Recent Posts

Despite US policy headwinds, India’s GCCs remain “not just resilient, but essential” 

India’s Global Capability Centers (GCCs) are facing not just one, but two policy storms. The…

3 days ago

En crypto: The world wants stablecoins. But can they stay stable?

Stablecoin, a cryptocurrency designed to maintain a stable value, typically by being pegged to an…

4 days ago

Indian firms are serious about ESG & tech is why they’re finally moving fast

Across India Inc., sustainability is no longer a branding add-on, it has become a measurable…

4 days ago

Unlocking data’s potential: Reimagining Business Intelligence with AI & analytics

Today, we live in an era where data is considered an invaluable asset, driving organizations’…

5 days ago

Scrape wars: Artists, AI & the battle for digital ownership

As AI redraws the boundaries of ownership, originality, and creative control, the fight over digital…

1 week ago