
It does launch the screen saver, but it does not require a password.
#DESKTOP DESTROYER WINDOWS 10 PASSWORD#
OK, I am losing my mind here.I have set up GP to turn on screen saver after 10 minutes, and to password protect.
How do you get windows to require a password after timeout? Windows. all gone! Revenge was sweet, justice served.Īmazing this little app from 1996? runs so well on Win 10. Their eyes were wide as dinner plates! Then I hit the Escape Key and. So was the follow-up expression when I said, "Ok, there might be one last hope, let me try something extreme." then I hit the F keys and starting blasting the critters with lasers, fire, chainsaw and blobs etc. Because only the Escape Key turns this off (most people forget how powerful and critical the Escape Key can be) they both freaked out when I came over to assist and told them OH NO! she had been infected with a horrible ransomware called, "Termite Bot Bit-locker." I told her the hard drive was completely toast and hoped she had saved everything to the cloud. Not only was the user totally freaked out with the munching termites all over her screen, my helpdesk tech was too. Back when the worst we had to deal with was spam waves and an occasional virus across the network (vs. Psexec -i 1 -s -u Administrator \\tester -c "c:\temp\stress.exe" /S maybe a batch file or PowerShell? Since you've read this far you have to admit you're curious. I figure I could do this when she walks away for a cup of coffee and doesn't lock her screen (most people don't). I need to copy over the app, launch it silently, push the F8 key (for termites), then several consecutive lift-clicks to posit the little buggers so they start eating. So I'm trying this with PSEXEC and almost there but not quite. We use ScreenConnect, which has an awesome Backstage option but Windows Notifications pops up a connection notice (despite ConnectWise saying it shouldn't). I can't wait.īut I want to do this clandestinely via remote session. The escape key is the only way to stop them (or change weapons with F keys) but most people don't know that and they simply freak out and scream for help. They look like an awful virus to the average user. they eat your screen, munching along until the whole screen is filled with them.
There's one option in there. the termites. :) It may trip up some malware apps, false positives etc., but it works great. Remember the old 16 bit app called Stress Relief? (stress-reducer-desktop-destroyer.exe) It still works on Win 10. but it's incredibly realistic, ugly, and fooled several of us. Ok, so the lady across from me freaked me out with a stupid plastic horse fly sitting on top of my monitor.