How can I remove an unwanted fragment of old GUI on my screen? (Windows 7)
Note- this is for Windows 7.. this one is for vista "Ghost" UI elements
So it is not a duplicate.. And also the changing the resolution(the accepted answer on that one), didn't fix it for me.
there may be a windows 7 specific answer
Here is a bit of the desktop.

At some point some old bit of GUI appeared and won't go away. Here it is hovering as I write this question.

It just sits there. And as you can no doubt appreciate, it is a nuisance.
I've tried clicking in the bottom left to mimimize all the windows and clicking again to restore but nope. And i've tried opening a window over it but it just won't paint over it. The unwanted bit of GUI stays on top of anything.
I have tried opening task manager, end tasking explorer and starting explorer again, but nope, still there. so besides restarting windows, what can I do?
added
And I tried the accepted answer here "Ghost" UI elements (and probably some others too) and the accepted answer of changing resolution, and some others I tried there, didn't work
windows-7
|
show 4 more comments
Note- this is for Windows 7.. this one is for vista "Ghost" UI elements
So it is not a duplicate.. And also the changing the resolution(the accepted answer on that one), didn't fix it for me.
there may be a windows 7 specific answer
Here is a bit of the desktop.

At some point some old bit of GUI appeared and won't go away. Here it is hovering as I write this question.

It just sits there. And as you can no doubt appreciate, it is a nuisance.
I've tried clicking in the bottom left to mimimize all the windows and clicking again to restore but nope. And i've tried opening a window over it but it just won't paint over it. The unwanted bit of GUI stays on top of anything.
I have tried opening task manager, end tasking explorer and starting explorer again, but nope, still there. so besides restarting windows, what can I do?
added
And I tried the accepted answer here "Ghost" UI elements (and probably some others too) and the accepted answer of changing resolution, and some others I tried there, didn't work
windows-7
Have you tried locking the screen then unlocking (so you're in the log-in screen and then get back into the same session), or logging off, and logging back on?
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:21
@JourneymanGeek not overly keen.. haven't tried locking screen before, would worry I can't unlock it. would have to try it on another comp first. so i'm sure. And as for logging off.. I guess that might close programs? i'm not that keen on programs closing.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:22
It won't, I use it to clean my keyboard. win-l is perfectly safe. logging off would close programs
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:24
@JourneymanGeek ok did win-l, it asked me for pswd, I knew it so fine. But "save as" still there when back.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:27
1
Right click on desktop and choose Refresh or change your Windows theme to classic and then back to Aero.
– StBlade
Nov 5 '13 at 15:00
|
show 4 more comments
Note- this is for Windows 7.. this one is for vista "Ghost" UI elements
So it is not a duplicate.. And also the changing the resolution(the accepted answer on that one), didn't fix it for me.
there may be a windows 7 specific answer
Here is a bit of the desktop.

At some point some old bit of GUI appeared and won't go away. Here it is hovering as I write this question.

It just sits there. And as you can no doubt appreciate, it is a nuisance.
I've tried clicking in the bottom left to mimimize all the windows and clicking again to restore but nope. And i've tried opening a window over it but it just won't paint over it. The unwanted bit of GUI stays on top of anything.
I have tried opening task manager, end tasking explorer and starting explorer again, but nope, still there. so besides restarting windows, what can I do?
added
And I tried the accepted answer here "Ghost" UI elements (and probably some others too) and the accepted answer of changing resolution, and some others I tried there, didn't work
windows-7
Note- this is for Windows 7.. this one is for vista "Ghost" UI elements
So it is not a duplicate.. And also the changing the resolution(the accepted answer on that one), didn't fix it for me.
there may be a windows 7 specific answer
Here is a bit of the desktop.

At some point some old bit of GUI appeared and won't go away. Here it is hovering as I write this question.

It just sits there. And as you can no doubt appreciate, it is a nuisance.
I've tried clicking in the bottom left to mimimize all the windows and clicking again to restore but nope. And i've tried opening a window over it but it just won't paint over it. The unwanted bit of GUI stays on top of anything.
I have tried opening task manager, end tasking explorer and starting explorer again, but nope, still there. so besides restarting windows, what can I do?
added
And I tried the accepted answer here "Ghost" UI elements (and probably some others too) and the accepted answer of changing resolution, and some others I tried there, didn't work
windows-7
windows-7
edited Mar 20 '17 at 10:04
Community♦
1
1
asked Nov 5 '13 at 14:17
barlopbarlop
15.6k2590150
15.6k2590150
Have you tried locking the screen then unlocking (so you're in the log-in screen and then get back into the same session), or logging off, and logging back on?
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:21
@JourneymanGeek not overly keen.. haven't tried locking screen before, would worry I can't unlock it. would have to try it on another comp first. so i'm sure. And as for logging off.. I guess that might close programs? i'm not that keen on programs closing.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:22
It won't, I use it to clean my keyboard. win-l is perfectly safe. logging off would close programs
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:24
@JourneymanGeek ok did win-l, it asked me for pswd, I knew it so fine. But "save as" still there when back.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:27
1
Right click on desktop and choose Refresh or change your Windows theme to classic and then back to Aero.
– StBlade
Nov 5 '13 at 15:00
|
show 4 more comments
Have you tried locking the screen then unlocking (so you're in the log-in screen and then get back into the same session), or logging off, and logging back on?
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:21
@JourneymanGeek not overly keen.. haven't tried locking screen before, would worry I can't unlock it. would have to try it on another comp first. so i'm sure. And as for logging off.. I guess that might close programs? i'm not that keen on programs closing.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:22
It won't, I use it to clean my keyboard. win-l is perfectly safe. logging off would close programs
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:24
@JourneymanGeek ok did win-l, it asked me for pswd, I knew it so fine. But "save as" still there when back.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:27
1
Right click on desktop and choose Refresh or change your Windows theme to classic and then back to Aero.
– StBlade
Nov 5 '13 at 15:00
Have you tried locking the screen then unlocking (so you're in the log-in screen and then get back into the same session), or logging off, and logging back on?
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:21
Have you tried locking the screen then unlocking (so you're in the log-in screen and then get back into the same session), or logging off, and logging back on?
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:21
@JourneymanGeek not overly keen.. haven't tried locking screen before, would worry I can't unlock it. would have to try it on another comp first. so i'm sure. And as for logging off.. I guess that might close programs? i'm not that keen on programs closing.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:22
@JourneymanGeek not overly keen.. haven't tried locking screen before, would worry I can't unlock it. would have to try it on another comp first. so i'm sure. And as for logging off.. I guess that might close programs? i'm not that keen on programs closing.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:22
It won't, I use it to clean my keyboard. win-l is perfectly safe. logging off would close programs
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:24
It won't, I use it to clean my keyboard. win-l is perfectly safe. logging off would close programs
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:24
@JourneymanGeek ok did win-l, it asked me for pswd, I knew it so fine. But "save as" still there when back.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:27
@JourneymanGeek ok did win-l, it asked me for pswd, I knew it so fine. But "save as" still there when back.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:27
1
1
Right click on desktop and choose Refresh or change your Windows theme to classic and then back to Aero.
– StBlade
Nov 5 '13 at 15:00
Right click on desktop and choose Refresh or change your Windows theme to classic and then back to Aero.
– StBlade
Nov 5 '13 at 15:00
|
show 4 more comments
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
What you can try is to change the theme of your windows from Aero to Classic and then back to Aero again. It could be that something got stuck in the refresh of the different themes that is causing screen artefacts that you are experiencing.
that worked, its variation that worked, was I was on basic "theme", got junk there, then switched to aero, junk gone. Then went back to basic. so i suppose the general would be, switch to a theme that is not aero if one is not already. then switch to aero. and junk goes. then switch to your preferred theme(maybe your original). so for me, Basic->aero and junk gone, then back to basic. Or for somebody that is already on and likes aero. aero->classic-->aero. for somebody that is on basic and likes basic. basic->aero->basic. So, either case involves 2 changes of theme and aero.
– barlop
Nov 6 '13 at 10:18
i have some leftover from visual studio and it wasn't disappearing even with this solution.. and visual studio window wasn't on screen, i'd even clicked the bottom right button to minimize everything. Oddly enough closing visual studio made it disappear! (closing a program is not something that'd normally resolve the issue but worked today)
– barlop
Sep 15 '16 at 23:15
add a comment |
The cleanest way to do it, without shutting down all your programs is to go to:
- Start Menu > Shut Down > Switch User
- On Welcome screen just log back in
You now have a fresh screen clean of artifacts and you never logged off.
1
For the user who downvoted, thinking it's the same as the log screen, it's not. Lock Screen has no effect and the artifacts are back. Switch user however works. You never actually switch a user, just log back in as the same user.
– David
Jan 31 at 4:00
I haven't tested this, as I haven't had the GUI issue recently, but i've upvoted you so as to undo whoever it was that downvoted you without comment.
– barlop
Jan 31 at 10:59
I just tested this when I didn't have the problem and it is fast and seems to redraw everything. This may be the best solution because I imagine that 'switch user' is a feature that might be more likely to stick around than a theme changing thing. And perhaps easier than trying to find options like 'change theme'. OTOH some people (at least back in the day), did disable 'fast user switching' so they won't have the option to 'switch user' e.g. ghacks.net/2017/04/25/disable-fast-user-switching-on-windows
– barlop
Jan 31 at 11:06
Thank you for the upvote, and the comments. The reason I also prefer this method is that it also cures other problems such as Explorer quirks. Lock screen didn't work for me either. Switch user method worked for me every time I had any sort of GUI and non GUI problem - that is when I really want to avoid a reboot, shutting down programs, or uif there is an active process (such as remote FTP backup) going on. Switch user simply keeps everything running in the background.
– David
Feb 1 at 6:24
1
I get it. To clarify, change theme didn’t work for me. That’s how I experimented with switch user that worked.
– David
Feb 2 at 19:04
|
show 2 more comments
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2 Answers
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What you can try is to change the theme of your windows from Aero to Classic and then back to Aero again. It could be that something got stuck in the refresh of the different themes that is causing screen artefacts that you are experiencing.
that worked, its variation that worked, was I was on basic "theme", got junk there, then switched to aero, junk gone. Then went back to basic. so i suppose the general would be, switch to a theme that is not aero if one is not already. then switch to aero. and junk goes. then switch to your preferred theme(maybe your original). so for me, Basic->aero and junk gone, then back to basic. Or for somebody that is already on and likes aero. aero->classic-->aero. for somebody that is on basic and likes basic. basic->aero->basic. So, either case involves 2 changes of theme and aero.
– barlop
Nov 6 '13 at 10:18
i have some leftover from visual studio and it wasn't disappearing even with this solution.. and visual studio window wasn't on screen, i'd even clicked the bottom right button to minimize everything. Oddly enough closing visual studio made it disappear! (closing a program is not something that'd normally resolve the issue but worked today)
– barlop
Sep 15 '16 at 23:15
add a comment |
What you can try is to change the theme of your windows from Aero to Classic and then back to Aero again. It could be that something got stuck in the refresh of the different themes that is causing screen artefacts that you are experiencing.
that worked, its variation that worked, was I was on basic "theme", got junk there, then switched to aero, junk gone. Then went back to basic. so i suppose the general would be, switch to a theme that is not aero if one is not already. then switch to aero. and junk goes. then switch to your preferred theme(maybe your original). so for me, Basic->aero and junk gone, then back to basic. Or for somebody that is already on and likes aero. aero->classic-->aero. for somebody that is on basic and likes basic. basic->aero->basic. So, either case involves 2 changes of theme and aero.
– barlop
Nov 6 '13 at 10:18
i have some leftover from visual studio and it wasn't disappearing even with this solution.. and visual studio window wasn't on screen, i'd even clicked the bottom right button to minimize everything. Oddly enough closing visual studio made it disappear! (closing a program is not something that'd normally resolve the issue but worked today)
– barlop
Sep 15 '16 at 23:15
add a comment |
What you can try is to change the theme of your windows from Aero to Classic and then back to Aero again. It could be that something got stuck in the refresh of the different themes that is causing screen artefacts that you are experiencing.
What you can try is to change the theme of your windows from Aero to Classic and then back to Aero again. It could be that something got stuck in the refresh of the different themes that is causing screen artefacts that you are experiencing.
answered Nov 6 '13 at 7:43
StBladeStBlade
377114
377114
that worked, its variation that worked, was I was on basic "theme", got junk there, then switched to aero, junk gone. Then went back to basic. so i suppose the general would be, switch to a theme that is not aero if one is not already. then switch to aero. and junk goes. then switch to your preferred theme(maybe your original). so for me, Basic->aero and junk gone, then back to basic. Or for somebody that is already on and likes aero. aero->classic-->aero. for somebody that is on basic and likes basic. basic->aero->basic. So, either case involves 2 changes of theme and aero.
– barlop
Nov 6 '13 at 10:18
i have some leftover from visual studio and it wasn't disappearing even with this solution.. and visual studio window wasn't on screen, i'd even clicked the bottom right button to minimize everything. Oddly enough closing visual studio made it disappear! (closing a program is not something that'd normally resolve the issue but worked today)
– barlop
Sep 15 '16 at 23:15
add a comment |
that worked, its variation that worked, was I was on basic "theme", got junk there, then switched to aero, junk gone. Then went back to basic. so i suppose the general would be, switch to a theme that is not aero if one is not already. then switch to aero. and junk goes. then switch to your preferred theme(maybe your original). so for me, Basic->aero and junk gone, then back to basic. Or for somebody that is already on and likes aero. aero->classic-->aero. for somebody that is on basic and likes basic. basic->aero->basic. So, either case involves 2 changes of theme and aero.
– barlop
Nov 6 '13 at 10:18
i have some leftover from visual studio and it wasn't disappearing even with this solution.. and visual studio window wasn't on screen, i'd even clicked the bottom right button to minimize everything. Oddly enough closing visual studio made it disappear! (closing a program is not something that'd normally resolve the issue but worked today)
– barlop
Sep 15 '16 at 23:15
that worked, its variation that worked, was I was on basic "theme", got junk there, then switched to aero, junk gone. Then went back to basic. so i suppose the general would be, switch to a theme that is not aero if one is not already. then switch to aero. and junk goes. then switch to your preferred theme(maybe your original). so for me, Basic->aero and junk gone, then back to basic. Or for somebody that is already on and likes aero. aero->classic-->aero. for somebody that is on basic and likes basic. basic->aero->basic. So, either case involves 2 changes of theme and aero.
– barlop
Nov 6 '13 at 10:18
that worked, its variation that worked, was I was on basic "theme", got junk there, then switched to aero, junk gone. Then went back to basic. so i suppose the general would be, switch to a theme that is not aero if one is not already. then switch to aero. and junk goes. then switch to your preferred theme(maybe your original). so for me, Basic->aero and junk gone, then back to basic. Or for somebody that is already on and likes aero. aero->classic-->aero. for somebody that is on basic and likes basic. basic->aero->basic. So, either case involves 2 changes of theme and aero.
– barlop
Nov 6 '13 at 10:18
i have some leftover from visual studio and it wasn't disappearing even with this solution.. and visual studio window wasn't on screen, i'd even clicked the bottom right button to minimize everything. Oddly enough closing visual studio made it disappear! (closing a program is not something that'd normally resolve the issue but worked today)
– barlop
Sep 15 '16 at 23:15
i have some leftover from visual studio and it wasn't disappearing even with this solution.. and visual studio window wasn't on screen, i'd even clicked the bottom right button to minimize everything. Oddly enough closing visual studio made it disappear! (closing a program is not something that'd normally resolve the issue but worked today)
– barlop
Sep 15 '16 at 23:15
add a comment |
The cleanest way to do it, without shutting down all your programs is to go to:
- Start Menu > Shut Down > Switch User
- On Welcome screen just log back in
You now have a fresh screen clean of artifacts and you never logged off.
1
For the user who downvoted, thinking it's the same as the log screen, it's not. Lock Screen has no effect and the artifacts are back. Switch user however works. You never actually switch a user, just log back in as the same user.
– David
Jan 31 at 4:00
I haven't tested this, as I haven't had the GUI issue recently, but i've upvoted you so as to undo whoever it was that downvoted you without comment.
– barlop
Jan 31 at 10:59
I just tested this when I didn't have the problem and it is fast and seems to redraw everything. This may be the best solution because I imagine that 'switch user' is a feature that might be more likely to stick around than a theme changing thing. And perhaps easier than trying to find options like 'change theme'. OTOH some people (at least back in the day), did disable 'fast user switching' so they won't have the option to 'switch user' e.g. ghacks.net/2017/04/25/disable-fast-user-switching-on-windows
– barlop
Jan 31 at 11:06
Thank you for the upvote, and the comments. The reason I also prefer this method is that it also cures other problems such as Explorer quirks. Lock screen didn't work for me either. Switch user method worked for me every time I had any sort of GUI and non GUI problem - that is when I really want to avoid a reboot, shutting down programs, or uif there is an active process (such as remote FTP backup) going on. Switch user simply keeps everything running in the background.
– David
Feb 1 at 6:24
1
I get it. To clarify, change theme didn’t work for me. That’s how I experimented with switch user that worked.
– David
Feb 2 at 19:04
|
show 2 more comments
The cleanest way to do it, without shutting down all your programs is to go to:
- Start Menu > Shut Down > Switch User
- On Welcome screen just log back in
You now have a fresh screen clean of artifacts and you never logged off.
1
For the user who downvoted, thinking it's the same as the log screen, it's not. Lock Screen has no effect and the artifacts are back. Switch user however works. You never actually switch a user, just log back in as the same user.
– David
Jan 31 at 4:00
I haven't tested this, as I haven't had the GUI issue recently, but i've upvoted you so as to undo whoever it was that downvoted you without comment.
– barlop
Jan 31 at 10:59
I just tested this when I didn't have the problem and it is fast and seems to redraw everything. This may be the best solution because I imagine that 'switch user' is a feature that might be more likely to stick around than a theme changing thing. And perhaps easier than trying to find options like 'change theme'. OTOH some people (at least back in the day), did disable 'fast user switching' so they won't have the option to 'switch user' e.g. ghacks.net/2017/04/25/disable-fast-user-switching-on-windows
– barlop
Jan 31 at 11:06
Thank you for the upvote, and the comments. The reason I also prefer this method is that it also cures other problems such as Explorer quirks. Lock screen didn't work for me either. Switch user method worked for me every time I had any sort of GUI and non GUI problem - that is when I really want to avoid a reboot, shutting down programs, or uif there is an active process (such as remote FTP backup) going on. Switch user simply keeps everything running in the background.
– David
Feb 1 at 6:24
1
I get it. To clarify, change theme didn’t work for me. That’s how I experimented with switch user that worked.
– David
Feb 2 at 19:04
|
show 2 more comments
The cleanest way to do it, without shutting down all your programs is to go to:
- Start Menu > Shut Down > Switch User
- On Welcome screen just log back in
You now have a fresh screen clean of artifacts and you never logged off.
The cleanest way to do it, without shutting down all your programs is to go to:
- Start Menu > Shut Down > Switch User
- On Welcome screen just log back in
You now have a fresh screen clean of artifacts and you never logged off.
answered Jan 31 at 2:42
DavidDavid
11
11
1
For the user who downvoted, thinking it's the same as the log screen, it's not. Lock Screen has no effect and the artifacts are back. Switch user however works. You never actually switch a user, just log back in as the same user.
– David
Jan 31 at 4:00
I haven't tested this, as I haven't had the GUI issue recently, but i've upvoted you so as to undo whoever it was that downvoted you without comment.
– barlop
Jan 31 at 10:59
I just tested this when I didn't have the problem and it is fast and seems to redraw everything. This may be the best solution because I imagine that 'switch user' is a feature that might be more likely to stick around than a theme changing thing. And perhaps easier than trying to find options like 'change theme'. OTOH some people (at least back in the day), did disable 'fast user switching' so they won't have the option to 'switch user' e.g. ghacks.net/2017/04/25/disable-fast-user-switching-on-windows
– barlop
Jan 31 at 11:06
Thank you for the upvote, and the comments. The reason I also prefer this method is that it also cures other problems such as Explorer quirks. Lock screen didn't work for me either. Switch user method worked for me every time I had any sort of GUI and non GUI problem - that is when I really want to avoid a reboot, shutting down programs, or uif there is an active process (such as remote FTP backup) going on. Switch user simply keeps everything running in the background.
– David
Feb 1 at 6:24
1
I get it. To clarify, change theme didn’t work for me. That’s how I experimented with switch user that worked.
– David
Feb 2 at 19:04
|
show 2 more comments
1
For the user who downvoted, thinking it's the same as the log screen, it's not. Lock Screen has no effect and the artifacts are back. Switch user however works. You never actually switch a user, just log back in as the same user.
– David
Jan 31 at 4:00
I haven't tested this, as I haven't had the GUI issue recently, but i've upvoted you so as to undo whoever it was that downvoted you without comment.
– barlop
Jan 31 at 10:59
I just tested this when I didn't have the problem and it is fast and seems to redraw everything. This may be the best solution because I imagine that 'switch user' is a feature that might be more likely to stick around than a theme changing thing. And perhaps easier than trying to find options like 'change theme'. OTOH some people (at least back in the day), did disable 'fast user switching' so they won't have the option to 'switch user' e.g. ghacks.net/2017/04/25/disable-fast-user-switching-on-windows
– barlop
Jan 31 at 11:06
Thank you for the upvote, and the comments. The reason I also prefer this method is that it also cures other problems such as Explorer quirks. Lock screen didn't work for me either. Switch user method worked for me every time I had any sort of GUI and non GUI problem - that is when I really want to avoid a reboot, shutting down programs, or uif there is an active process (such as remote FTP backup) going on. Switch user simply keeps everything running in the background.
– David
Feb 1 at 6:24
1
I get it. To clarify, change theme didn’t work for me. That’s how I experimented with switch user that worked.
– David
Feb 2 at 19:04
1
1
For the user who downvoted, thinking it's the same as the log screen, it's not. Lock Screen has no effect and the artifacts are back. Switch user however works. You never actually switch a user, just log back in as the same user.
– David
Jan 31 at 4:00
For the user who downvoted, thinking it's the same as the log screen, it's not. Lock Screen has no effect and the artifacts are back. Switch user however works. You never actually switch a user, just log back in as the same user.
– David
Jan 31 at 4:00
I haven't tested this, as I haven't had the GUI issue recently, but i've upvoted you so as to undo whoever it was that downvoted you without comment.
– barlop
Jan 31 at 10:59
I haven't tested this, as I haven't had the GUI issue recently, but i've upvoted you so as to undo whoever it was that downvoted you without comment.
– barlop
Jan 31 at 10:59
I just tested this when I didn't have the problem and it is fast and seems to redraw everything. This may be the best solution because I imagine that 'switch user' is a feature that might be more likely to stick around than a theme changing thing. And perhaps easier than trying to find options like 'change theme'. OTOH some people (at least back in the day), did disable 'fast user switching' so they won't have the option to 'switch user' e.g. ghacks.net/2017/04/25/disable-fast-user-switching-on-windows
– barlop
Jan 31 at 11:06
I just tested this when I didn't have the problem and it is fast and seems to redraw everything. This may be the best solution because I imagine that 'switch user' is a feature that might be more likely to stick around than a theme changing thing. And perhaps easier than trying to find options like 'change theme'. OTOH some people (at least back in the day), did disable 'fast user switching' so they won't have the option to 'switch user' e.g. ghacks.net/2017/04/25/disable-fast-user-switching-on-windows
– barlop
Jan 31 at 11:06
Thank you for the upvote, and the comments. The reason I also prefer this method is that it also cures other problems such as Explorer quirks. Lock screen didn't work for me either. Switch user method worked for me every time I had any sort of GUI and non GUI problem - that is when I really want to avoid a reboot, shutting down programs, or uif there is an active process (such as remote FTP backup) going on. Switch user simply keeps everything running in the background.
– David
Feb 1 at 6:24
Thank you for the upvote, and the comments. The reason I also prefer this method is that it also cures other problems such as Explorer quirks. Lock screen didn't work for me either. Switch user method worked for me every time I had any sort of GUI and non GUI problem - that is when I really want to avoid a reboot, shutting down programs, or uif there is an active process (such as remote FTP backup) going on. Switch user simply keeps everything running in the background.
– David
Feb 1 at 6:24
1
1
I get it. To clarify, change theme didn’t work for me. That’s how I experimented with switch user that worked.
– David
Feb 2 at 19:04
I get it. To clarify, change theme didn’t work for me. That’s how I experimented with switch user that worked.
– David
Feb 2 at 19:04
|
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Have you tried locking the screen then unlocking (so you're in the log-in screen and then get back into the same session), or logging off, and logging back on?
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:21
@JourneymanGeek not overly keen.. haven't tried locking screen before, would worry I can't unlock it. would have to try it on another comp first. so i'm sure. And as for logging off.. I guess that might close programs? i'm not that keen on programs closing.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:22
It won't, I use it to clean my keyboard. win-l is perfectly safe. logging off would close programs
– Journeyman Geek♦
Nov 5 '13 at 14:24
@JourneymanGeek ok did win-l, it asked me for pswd, I knew it so fine. But "save as" still there when back.
– barlop
Nov 5 '13 at 14:27
1
Right click on desktop and choose Refresh or change your Windows theme to classic and then back to Aero.
– StBlade
Nov 5 '13 at 15:00